Categories
Forex Basics Forex Daily Topic

Attributes of the Signal Candle Not to be Ignored

After choosing a pair to trade, traders wait for the signal candle at the desired zone/level to take an entry. The attributes of the signal candle are important. Ideally, a signal candle is to be a Marubozu candle, barely having an upper or lower shadow, and longer than other candles around. In today’s lesson, we are going to show an example of how attributes of a signal candle affect the market. Let us proceed.

The price after being bearish finds its support. A long consolidation suggests that a breakout towards either side makes the chart lively again. An upside breakout and the confirmation offer good risk-reward considering the last swing high. A downside breakout seems even more rewarding. Let us find out which way the breakout takes place.

It is an upside breakout. The breakout candle looks fantastic. Buyers are to wait for consolidation and breakout at the highest high to go long on the pair. However, buyers shall calculate that the last swing high is not too far away now.

The price continues its bullish journey towards the last swing high, and it consolidates. Flipped support is to be adjusted here considering the Inside bar. However, an upper shadow at the previous swing high holds the price as well up to the Inside bar. The last candle comes out from the zone, though. Look at its attributes

  • It is a bullish engulfing candle
  • It breaches the resistance zone
  • It is a Bullish Marubozu candle

Many of us may trigger an entry here by setting Stop Loss below the lowest low of the candle. Let us find out what happens next.

The price comes down again. It may have swept away many Stop Losses. Thus, the last entry gets the buyers loss. What do you think about the last candle?

  • It is a bullish engulfing candle
  • It breaches the resistance zone
  • It is a Bullish Marubozu candle and
  • It breaches the last swing high

 

Traders may want to trigger an entry here. Let us go to the next chart to see how it goes.

This time it works excellently well. A question may arise here: what the difference is between these two candles?. The only difference that can be observed is, “It breaches the last swing high.”

The Bottom Line

We have demonstrated an example today and learned a lesson. Traders are to be immaculate in making a decision, and they have to calculate every single aspect that is related to the trading decision.

 

Categories
Forex Harmonic Forex Trading Guides

Harmonic Pattern Guide – Walkthrough

 Harmonic Pattern – Walkthrough

Bearish Butterfly Pattern against 180-degree Square of 9 angle.
Bearish Butterfly Pattern against 180-degree Square of 9 angle.

The chart above is the AUDJPY Forex pair on its 6-hour chart. If you are unable to identify this pattern without referencing notes or the prior articles, you are not ready to use this form of technical analysis. Regardless, the pattern above is a Bearish Butterfly Pattern.

Harmonic Patterns are by there very nature indicative of imminent price reversals. The PRZ (Potential Reversal Zone) is, in my opinion, the most critical level when determining whether to utilize a Harmonic Pattern in my trading. A Harmonic Pattern itself is not a sufficient enough form of analysis to decide whether or not to take a trade. Harmonic Patterns, in my opinion, should not be used as a primary form of analysis, but rather a complementary or confirmatory form of analysis. The chart above is an excellent example of this.

The horizontal levels on AUDJPY’s chart are derived from W.D. Gann’s Square of 9 – natural number values that represent angles. The methods and theories in Gann Analysis are an entirely different topic and require years of study and research – but for this article, one component of his work will help make my point. The red horizontal line at the top is a 180-degree Square of 9 angle. The 180-degree Square of 9 angle is already a strong and naturally powerful level of resistance. When I see price is near the 180-degree Square of 9 angle, I know one thing is for sure:

There is a high probability that the AUDJPY will have difficulty crossing this level and a high probability of price, at least initially, being rejected from moving higher.

So I would naturally look to be taking a short trade if the market shows rejection at that level. That is where the presence of a Harmonic Pattern is desirable. The Bearish Butterfly Pattern is one of the most reliable and most powerful reversal patterns in all Scott Carney’s work. I know that the Butterfly Pattern typically shows up at the end of a swing – not necessarily a trend, but the end of a swing. If I see a Bearish Butterfly Pattern, I know one thing is for sure:

The Bearish Butterfly Pattern is a reversal pattern. I also understand that the Bearish Butterfly Pattern appears at the top of a swing, indicating an extended and overdone market.

After seeing price approach, the naturally strong reversal level of the 180-degree Square of 9 angle, and then the completion of a Bearish Butterfly Pattern, I believe that there is a sufficient amount of analysis to risk taking a short trade. A short trade is further validated by the completion of a bearish engulfing candlestick, as well as some lengthily bearish divergence on the RSI.

 

Categories
Forex Harmonic

The 5-0 Harmonic Pattern

Harmonic Pattern Example: Bearish 5-0 Harmonic Pattern

The 5-0 Harmonic Pattern

Like the Shark Pattern, the 5-0 pattern is a relatively new pattern discovered by the great Scott Carney. Carney revealed this pattern in his second book in his harmonic series, Harmonic Trading: Volume Two.

The 5-0 pattern is easily one of the wonkiest looking patterns. Depending on where you are at with your knowledge of harmonic patterns, the 5-0 will look foreign. And this is primarily because the 5-0 Pattern starts a 0. If you are used to seeing XABCD,  then 0XABCD will undoubtedly look odd.

5-0 Elements

  1. The pattern begins (begins with 0) at the beginning of an extended price move (direct quote from Carney’s work).
  2. After 0 has been established, an impulse reversal at X, A, and B must possess a 113 – 161.8% extension.
  3. The projection off of AB has a 161.8% extension requirement to C. C can move beyond the 161.8% extension but not beyond 224%.
  4. D is the 50% retracement of BC and is equal to AB (a Reciprocal AB=CD Pattern).
  5. The reciprocal AB=CD is required.

One of the best ways to interpret this pattern is to view it from an exasperated trader’s point of view. If we take the Bullish 5-0 Pattern as an example, then we can see why. The AB leg ends with B below X, creating a lower low. We then get an extended move in time where the BC leg is the most prolonged move with C ending above A. The movement from B to C may take on the appearance of a bear flag or bearish pennant. C to D shows intense shorting pressure and a belief among bears that new lows are going to be found. Instead, we get to D – the 50% retracement of BC. Instead of new lower lows, we get a confirmation swing creating a higher low. That move will more than likely generate a brand new trend reversal or significant corrective move.

 

Sources: Carney, S. M. (2010). Harmonic trading. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Financial Times/Prentice Hall.  Gilmore, B. T. (2000). Geometry of markets. Greenville, SC: Traders Press.  Pesavento, L., & Jouflas, L. (2008). Trade what you see: how to profit from pattern recognition. Hoboken: Wiley.

Categories
Forex Price Action

Equidistant Channel Trading: What Else to Consider?

Equidistant Channel is a very reliable trading tool for the price action traders. In an ascending Equidistant Channel, the buyers wait for the price to come at the support level and to get a bullish reversal candle to go long. It is vice versa, in the case of a descending channel. However, some other equations are to be taken care of by the traders when trading with an Equidistant Channel. In today’s lesson, this is what we are going to demonstrate. Let us get started.

The chart above shows that the price is caught within an ascending Equidistant Channel. Look at the last bearish wave. After a rejection, the price heads towards the support. As a trader, we shall wait for a bullish reversal candle to go long here. Let us proceed to find out what happens next.

Wow! The price action traders always dream of this. This is one good bullish reversal candle. A bullish engulfing candle right at the channel’s support, the buyers, shall jump into the pair to start buying. However, we must set stop loss, take profit. Stop Loss level looks very evident here, which will be below the signal candle (Bullish Engulfing Candle here). What is about the Take Profit level? Where shall we set it? Typically, we set it at the upper band of the channel since the price usually goes towards the resistance of the channel after having a bounce at the support level.

Look at the chart. At the last wave, the price produced a bearish engulfing candle right at a strong horizontal resistance (arrowed). It had a rejection at this level earlier, as well. Thus, this is a level, which must be counted at the time of setting Take Profit level.

Despite having an engulfing daily candle, the price does not head towards the North with a good buying pressure. Anyway, it heads towards the upside. Look at the rejection. This means setting our take profit at the horizontal resistance would give us 1:1 risk and reward ratio here. This is not bad. However, if we make a target to go all the way towards the upper band, it may get us a loss instead.

Let us see how the price action acts afterward.

We would not make a loss here, but see how the price action has been. It gets choppy. It may still offer more long entries since the support is held by the price. However, we know what else is to look for, a breakout at a significant level of horizontal resistance.

Key Points to Remember in Equidistant Channel trading:

  1. A significant level of horizontal support/resistance is to be broken.
  2. If there is no horizontal support/resistance, an anti-trend line is to be broken.
  3. The signal candle is to be a strong trend reversal candle.
  4. In the case of having horizontal support/resistance in the middle of a channel, at least the Risk-Reward ratio is to be 1:1.
Categories
Forex Indicators

Let’s Trade Divergences!

Trading with Divergences

Almost all forms of technical analysis involve the use of lagging indicators – or lagging analysis. There are very few indicators that use any type of leading analysis. That is because we don’t know what will happen. All we can do is interpret what kind of future behavior may occur based on past events – this is the basis of all psychology and significant portions of medicine: we can only predict future behavior by analyzing past behavior. Now, just because most of the tools and theories used in technical analysis are lagging in nature – it doesn’t mean that there is no method of leading analysis.

Divergences are one method of turning lagging analysis into leading analysis – it’s not 100% accurate, but divergences can detect anomalies and differences in normal price behavior. Divergences are useful in identifying when a significant trend may be ending or when a pullback may continue in the prior trend direction. Let’s review some of those now.

Divergences are easily one of the most complex components to learn in technical analysis. First, they are challenging to identify when you are starting. Second, it can be confusing trying to remember which divergence is which and if you compare highs or lows. It is essential to know those divergences themselves are not sufficient to decide whether or not to take a trade – they help confirm trades.

When we look for divergences, we are looking for discrepancies between the directions of highs and lows in price against another indicator/oscillator. The RSI is the oscillator used for this lesson. We are going to review the four main types of divergences:

  1. Bullish Divergence
  2. Bearish Divergence
  3. Hidden Bullish Divergence
  4. Hidden Bearish Divergence

Bullish divergence

Bullish Divergence

A bullish divergence occurs, generally, at the end of a downtrend. In all forms of bullish divergences, we compare swing lows in price and the oscillator. For a bullish divergence to happen, we should observe price making new lower lows and the oscillator making new higher lows. When bullish divergence occurs, prices will usually rally or consolidate.

Bearish divergence

Bearish Divergence

A bearish divergence is the inverse of a bullish divergence. A bearish divergence occurs near the end of an uptrend and gives a warning that the trend may change. In all forms of bearish divergence, we compare swing highs in price and the oscillator. For a bearish divergence to happen, we should observe price making new higher highs and the oscillator making new lower highs.

Hidden divergences

The last two divergences are known as hidden divergences. Hidden does not mean that it is difficult to see or hard to find – rather, it shows where a short term change in direction is actually a continuation move. Think of it as a pullback or a throwback in a larger uptrend or downtrend. Hidden divergences tell you of a probable continuation of a trend, not a broad trend change. If you combine these with common pullback and throwback patterns such as flags and pennants, then the identification and strength of a hidden divergence can yield extremely positive results.

Hidden Bullish Divergence

Hidden Bullish Divergence

A hidden bullish divergence can appear in uptrends and downtrends but is only valid if there is an existing uptrend. It’s easier to think of hidden bullish divergences as pullbacks or continuation patterns. For hidden bullish divergences, we should observe price making new higher lows and the oscillator making new lower lows. The expected price behavior is a continuation of higher prices.

Hidden Bearish Divergence

Hidden Bearish Divergence

Our final divergence is hidden bearish divergence. Just like hidden bullish divergence, hidden bearish divergence can appear in both uptrends and downtrends but is only valid in an existing downtrend. Hidden bearish divergence is identified when price makes lower highs, and the oscillator makes new higher highs. We should observe a resumption in the prior downtrend when hidden bearish divergence is identified.

Key Points

Regular Bullish Divergence
  • End of a downtrend.
  • Often the second swing low.
  • Price makes new Lower Lows, but the oscillator makes Higher Lows.
  • Trend changes to the upside.
Regular Bearish Divergence
  • End of an uptrend.
  • Often the second swing high.
  • Price makes Higher Highs, but the oscillator makes Lower Highs.
  • Trend changes to the downside.
Hidden Bullish Divergence
  • Valid only during an uptrend.
  • Price makes Higher Lows, but the oscillator makes a Lower Low.
  • The trend should continue to the upside.
Hidden Bearish Divergence
  • Valid only during a downtrend.
  • Price makes Lower Highs, but the oscillator makes Higher Highs.
  • The trend should continue to the downside.

Final words

It may be confusing trying to remember which divergence is which and you’ll find yourself asking questions such as, “do I use highs on this divergence or lows?” It’s easier to think about measuring divergences like this:

All Bullish divergences are going to compare lows to lows – lows in price and lows in an oscillator.

All Bearish divergences are going to compare highs to highs – highs in price and highs in an oscillator.

Categories
Forex Chart Basics

Dissection of a Candlestick

A candlestick is a type of price that financial markets’ charts use to display the high, low, opening, and closing prices for a particular period. It is the most commonly used price chart among financial traders nowadays. It does not only show the high, low, opening, and closing prices but also represents the true psychology of the traders. This is the main reason for the candlestick/candlestick chart being the most popular chart in the financial markets.

Let us demonstrate two typical types of candlesticks to find out how they look and how they are formed.

Let us start with a Bullish Candlestick.

In a Bullish Candlestick, the price opens at the downside; goes down and goes up again. This is what creates the lower shadow. The price continues to go upwards and goes all the way up to where the upper shadow ends. It comes down and closes at the Closing Price. This is what creates the Upper Shadow. Eventually, Opening Price and Closing Price creates Bullish Body. A Bullish Candlestick is usually represented by Green or White color.

Let’s have a look at a typical bullish market in Candlestick Chart.

The chart shows that the market is bullish. Most of the candles are bullish candlesticks. Thus the price heads towards the North. However, not all of them have Upper Shadow, Lower Shadow, or a thick Body that we have demonstrated in this lesson earlier. The market produces several types of Candlesticks, and they convey different messages to the traders.

A Bearish Candlestick is just the opposite. Let us have a look at that.

As we see here, that the price opens at the upside. Goes up and comes down to create the Upper Shadow. Comes all the way down and closes the price a bit further up. This is what creates the Lower Shadow. Difference between the Opening and Closing Price creates the Bearish Body.

Let us have a look at a bearish market in Candlestick Chart.

Same goes here. Not all the candlesticks are as typical as we have demonstrated in our lesson. However, the message is clear here. The price is bearish because of the dominance of Bearish Candles.

Not all the candles with a bearish body (or bullish body) declare the supremacy of the bearish market (or bullish market). By being able to read them well, traders can predict the market’s trend, trend continuation, and trend reversal.

In our fore coming articles, we will learn different types of candlesticks that the market produces; how they look like; what message they convey to the traders; how to read and make a profit out of them.

 

 

 

Categories
Crypto Market Analysis

Bitcoin Long, The Most Expected Setup

Bitcoin (BTC)

Market Cap. $143.84B

Circulating Supply 16.99M BTC

Max Supply: 21M BTC

Volume (24H) $7.40B

 

Bitcoin massive corrective phase has forced the other cryptocurrencies to drop as well. Technically, a corrective phase was expected, but not so deep. Unfortunately, the fundamental factors have taken the lead and have driven the rate towards the 6000 psychological level.

Bitcoin Long, The Most Expected Setup

Bitcoin has shown an oversold when it ihas finally managed to make a valid breakout above the first warning line (WL1) of the descending pitchfork. Price tested and retested the sliding parallel line (sl) of the ascending Pitchfork signaling a bullish pressure.

The rate increased and is trading above the $8500 and much above the lower median line (lml) of the ascending pitchfork. It has managed to breakout above the WL2 today, but the breakout needs confirmation.

I draw two potential long trading setups on the Daily chart for those who didn’t enter long in the previous week.  Price could increase further in the upcoming days without a retest of the broken WL2 but is too risky.

Personally, I would wait for a retest of the WL2 and the lower median line (lml) before I go long again on the Bitcoin. It would be perfect if the rate will come down towards the outside sliding line (sl) because we’ll have a great buying opportunity with a very low risk.

bitcoin setup

Bitcoin will resume the upside movement if it has enough energy to climb and close above the $8600 level. It could be pulled by the confluence area, formed between the 50% Fibonacci line and the 350% Fibonacci line. A valid breakout through this confluence area will accelerate the bullish momentum.

In conclusion, a decrease will give us a great opportunity to go long on the Bitcoin again if you don’t want to take a long position with a high risk and to place a Stop Loss below the $6425 low.

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