EUR/JPY - Live Rate, Chart, Forecast & News FX Empire
EUR/JPY Price Analysis: Further upside remains in the ...
http://twitter.com/forex_in_world/status/1265587671822487552Chart Art: New Trade Opportunities on EUR/USD and USD/JPY https://t.co/lb6ssTED4q— FOREX IN WORLD (@forex_in_world) May 27, 2020
So there seems to be a lot of new people on this sub. And makes sense if you have questions a lot of time you'll turn to reddit for the answers (I know I do). Well here are some tips that I think would benefit new traders.
Don't trade ANY Euro pairs. Look I know it's the most traded pair it goes up and down really fast and there's so much potential for you to make money. Turns out there's even more for you to lose money. It's way too volatile specially if you don't know what you're doing. EUUSD is the worst offender.
Trade the Daily. Might think you're cool looking at charts every x amount of times during the day. You get to tell your friends and family that you trade all day and they might be impressed at what you're doing but unless you have some years under you stick to the daily. There's less noise. You can see clearer trends and when you don't stare at the screen all day you're less emotional therefore a more effective trader. I only look at the chart 15 minutes a day to either enter close or manage my trades. Whatever happens when I'm gone is what happens.
There is no holy grail indicator Look for it all you want. It doesn't exist. There are good indicators. There are bad indicators. There are some indicators that are so broken if you do the opposite of what they're intended for you'll actually make a profit. But the fact remains that there's no perfect one. Stop looking. What you should be looking for is an indicator that fits with your strategy.
What currencies to pick. I actually never see this brought up. The notion in forex is that all pairs can be traded equally. To a certain extent that's not false. But until you get the hang of it stick to a strict trading diet. Look for pairs that trend a lot. Duh look for the trend I can hear you say. When I say trend I don't mean a couple of days or weeks. I mean a couple of months. Half a year. Pairs that do that have a higher tendency to stick with one direction for a while. That's where you make your money. An easy way to identify those pairs as well is putting together a volatile currency (USD) with a less volatile one(JPY).
USE YOUR SL Trust me even if not putting a SL has netted you all kinds of gains eventually the market will turn around and bite you. With no safety net you'll lose most if not all your profit. The best offense is a good defense.
How to pick your TP and SL level. Most new traders care so much about that. I put it near the bottom because in my opinion you should know everything listed first. This is my opinion and I use it for my strategy I use the ATR(average true range) indicator. It's a really helpful tool that helps you identify the range at which the candles will either rise or fall. Obviously you want to set your TP inside of that range and your SL slightly outside of it.
Lot sizes. Everyone has a different story about how they pick their lot size. The general consensus is don't risk over 2% of your account. But I'm a simple man and I can't be bothered to figure out what my risk is every single time. So what I do is I put $0.10 for every $100 I have on the account. I then assign $300(minimum) to each pair. That's $0.30 per pair. It's easy to remember. 10 cent for every $100. If you're able to blow $100 with $0.10 then you probably shouldn't trade.
How to avoid reversals. Tbh you can't. There's no way to predict the future so eventually you'll get hit by one. What you can do however is minimize the blow. How I do it is for every pair I take two trades. If you remember in the previous tip is said I do about$0.30 per pair well I divide it 2:1. I take one trade with a TP(2) and one without (1). If my TP is hit I pocket that amount and if the trend keeps going in my direction I make even more. If the trend decides to end or reverses my losses are minimal because at least I kept half.
There is NO right way to trade. Stop listening to people telling the best way to trade is fundamentals or naked charts of to use some specific indicator. There are no right way to do this. It's as flexible and unlimited as your imagination. I personally use indicators but if that's not your thing do YOU! Just remember to manage your trades properly and be level headed when trading. Hell if your trading strategy is flipping a coin with proper trade management you'd probably make some money (don't quote me on that).
Trade money you're willing to lose Don't trade your rent money.
That's all I have for now. If anyone sees this and wants to add more feel free. Hope this helps someone.
Real quick before I get into my next steps of my FX Journey, id like to say thank you to all the people who commented on my last post! All of the tips I got were really eye-opening and introduced me to different parts of FX trading that I didn't even know existed. So thank you so much, and I hope to get more interesting feedback from you guys in the future! Also Im going to probably change my writing frequency from daily to biweekly. I think writing about every little trade is not going to be as beneficial to me as writing about my overall progress at certain points throughout the week. I started this trading day out by learning up on order flow. A whole bunch of you guys suggested really interesting youtubers to watch, and I started with Mr. pip's series on order flow. After I finished up watching a few of his videos, I started to tweak my trading plan so that I could get in some chart time. I changed currency pair from EUUSD to the AUD/USD, the time frame from the 4 hour to the 1 hour, and my indicators from RSI, Stochastic, 2 SMAs and ADX to ATR, RSI, and Ichimoku Kinko Hyo. I also added a little fundamental analysis in my trading plan because I think that I am being far too reliant on my indicators. I planned to check the economic calendar and determine the general trend of the currency pairs that are strongly correlated to the AUD/USD before I began my chart analysis. In addition to all of my analysis, I tried to practice using the techniques I learned in Mr. Pip's videos and analyze the order flow of the chart. Even if my analysis of order flow is wrong, as long as I am getting practice I am learning. Eventhough I planned to use today to back-test indicators and find a solid new plan, I did not have enough time. I ended up getting on my demo account really late in the day, and started to force myself to enter a trade. Destructive habits like this could lead into some massive issues when I eventually get into live trading. To combat this harmful attitude specifically, I will restrict myself to trading on certain parts of the day (for example session overlaps, news releases, and earlier in the day). Despite this mistake I still continued with my trading strategy. I calculated all the currency correlations for AUS/USD using the past weeks economic data, and set my indicators in place. After checking the overall trend of the most strongly correlated pairs (Positive: EUUSD, GPB/USD, Negative: USD/CAD, USD/JPY) I started to analyze the order flow. All the correlated currencies, except for EUUSD, indicated that the AUD/USD would fall, while my order flow analysis indicated the opposite. Seeing as though I am extremely new to order flow, I dismissed this analysis, and ended up forcing a trade on the AUD/USD going short when my indicators seemed to line up correctly. I learned from last time that I should not alter or close my trade purely based on emotion, and to just wait till the market hits my stop loss or take profit. I included a trailing stop loss of 60 pips this time, but I have no evidence to base that number range on. The trade is currently open and I am down about 30 pips. Although I am not labeling this trade as a loser yet, I can definitely see a lot of holes in my trading strategy. The most obvious mistake in my eyes right now is my use of indicators. Currently all my trades are purely based on what my indicators say, and since I do not have any back-tested data to support the credibility of my indicators, it feels a lot like strategic gambling. Another issue is that I feel far too reliant on indicators alone. I think that if I can find ways to include various types of analysis efficiently and evenly in my trading plan I will become a much more skillful and well-rounded trader. In order to combat these two issues I will begin forming various types of trading strategies this weekend and back-test them all extensively. I also plan on researching more on price action, order flow, and Naked Forex. Once again any and all feedback is welcome. I am just beginning Forex, but it had been a huge passion of mine and I don't plan on stopping anytime soon.
Disclaimer: None of this is financial advice. I have no idea what I'm doing. Please do your own research or you will certainly lose money. I'm not a statistician, data scientist, well-seasoned trader, or anything else that would qualify me to make statements such as the below with any weight behind them. Take them for the incoherent ramblings that they are. TL;DR at the bottom for those not interested in the details. This is a bit of a novel, sorry about that. It was mostly for getting my own thoughts organized, but if even one person reads the whole thing I will feel incredibly accomplished.
Background
For those of you not familiar, please see the various threads on this trading system here. I can't take credit for this system, all glory goes to ParallaxFX! I wanted to see how effective this system was at H1 for a couple of reasons: 1) My current broker is TD Ameritrade - their Forex minimum is a mini lot, and I don't feel comfortable enough yet with the risk to trade mini lots on the higher timeframes(i.e. wider pip swings) that ParallaxFX's system uses, so I wanted to see if I could scale it down. 2) I'm fairly impatient, so I don't like to wait days and days with my capital tied up just to see if a trade is going to win or lose. This does mean it requires more active attention since you are checking for setups once an hour instead of once a day or every 4-6 hours, but the upside is that you trade more often this way so you end up winning or losing faster and moving onto the next trade. Spread does eat more of the trade this way, but I'll cover this in my data below - it ends up not being a problem. I looked at data from 6/11 to 7/3 on all pairs with a reasonable spread(pairs listed at bottom above the TL;DR). So this represents about 3-4 weeks' worth of trading. I used mark(mid) price charts. Spreadsheet link is below for anyone that's interested.
System Details
I'm pretty much using ParallaxFX's system textbook, but since there are a few options in his writeups, I'll include all the discretionary points here:
I'm using the stop entry version - so I wait for the price to trade beyond the confirmation candle(in the direction of my trade) before entering. I don't have any data to support this decision, but I've always preferred this method over retracement-limit entries. Maybe I just like the feeling of a higher winrate even though there can be greater R:R using a limit entry. Variety is the spice of life.
I put my stop loss right at the opposite edge of the confirmation candle. NOT at the edge of the 2-candle pattern that makes up the system. I'll get into this more below - not enough trades are saved to justify the wider stops. (Wider stop means less $ per pip won, assuming you still only risk 1%).
All my profit/loss statistics are based on a 1% risk per trade. Because 1 is real easy to multiply.
There are definitely some questionable trades in here, but I tried to make it as mechanical as possible for evaluation purposes. They do fit the definitions of the system, which is why I included them. You could probably improve the winrate by being more discretionary about your trades by looking at support/resistance or other techniques.
I didn't use MBB much for either entering trades, or as support/resistance indicators. Again, trying to be pretty mechanical here just for data collection purposes. Plus, we all make bad trading decisions now and then, so let's call it even.
As stated in the title, this is for H1 only. These results may very well not play out for other time frames - who knows, it may not even work on H1 starting this Monday. Forex is an unpredictable place.
I collected data to show efficacy of taking profit at three different levels: -61.8%, -100% and -161.8% fib levels described in the system using the passive trade management method(set it and forget it). I'll have more below about moving up stops and taking off portions of a position.
And now for the fun. Results!
Total Trades: 241
Raw Winrates:
TP at -61.8%: 177 out of 241: 73.44%
TP at -100%: 156 out of 241: 64.73%
TP at -161.8%: 121 out of 241: 50.20%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account):
TP at -61.8%: 5.22%
TP at -100%: 23.55%
TP at -161.8%: 29.14%
As you can see, a higher target ended up with higher profit despite a much lower winrate. This is partially just how things work out with profit targets in general, but there's an additional point to consider in our case: the spread. Since we are trading on a lower timeframe, there is less overall price movement and thus the spread takes up a much larger percentage of the trade than it would if you were trading H4, Daily or Weekly charts. You can see exactly how much it accounts for each trade in my spreadsheet if you're interested. TDA does not have the best spreads, so you could probably improve these results with another broker. EDIT: I grabbed typical spreads from other brokers, and turns out while TDA is pretty competitive on majors, their minors/crosses are awful! IG beats them by 20-40% and Oanda beats them 30-60%! Using IG spreads for calculations increased profits considerably (another 5% on top) and Oanda spreads increased profits massively (another 15%!). Definitely going to be considering another broker than TDA for this strategy. Plus that'll allow me to trade micro-lots, so I can be more granular(and thus accurate) with my position sizing and compounding.
A Note on Spread
As you can see in the data, there were scenarios where the spread was 80% of the overall size of the trade(the size of the confirmation candle that you draw your fibonacci retracements over), which would obviously cut heavily into your profits. Removing any trades where the spread is more than 50% of the trade width improved profits slightly without removing many trades, but this is almost certainly just coincidence on a small sample size. Going below 40% and even down to 30% starts to cut out a lot of trades for the less-common pairs, but doesn't actually change overall profits at all(~1% either way). However, digging all the way down to 25% starts to really make some movement. Profit at the -161.8% TP level jumps up to 37.94% if you filter out anything with a spread that is more than 25% of the trade width! And this even keeps the sample size fairly large at 187 total trades. You can get your profits all the way up to 48.43% at the -161.8% TP level if you filter all the way down to only trades where spread is less than 15% of the trade width, however your sample size gets much smaller at that point(108 trades) so I'm not sure I would trust that as being accurate in the long term. Overall based on this data, I'm going to only take trades where the spread is less than 25% of the trade width. This may bias my trades more towards the majors, which would mean a lot more correlated trades as well(more on correlation below), but I think it is a reasonable precaution regardless.
Time of Day
Time of day had an interesting effect on trades. In a totally predictable fashion, a vast majority of setups occurred during the London and New York sessions: 5am-12pm Eastern. However, there was one outlier where there were many setups on the 11PM bar - and the winrate was about the same as the big hours in the London session. No idea why this hour in particular - anyone have any insight? That's smack in the middle of the Tokyo/Sydney overlap, not at the open or close of either. On many of the hour slices I have a feeling I'm just dealing with small number statistics here since I didn't have a lot of data when breaking it down by individual hours. But here it is anyway - for all TP levels, these three things showed up(all in Eastern time):
7pm-4am: Fewer setups, but winrate high.
5am-6am: Lots of setups, but but winrate low.
12pm-3pm Medium number of setups, but winrate low.
I don't have any reason to think these timeframes would maintain this behavior over the long term. They're almost certainly meaningless. EDIT: When you de-dup highly correlated trades, the number of trades in these timeframes really drops, so from this data there is no reason to think these timeframes would be any different than any others in terms of winrate. That being said, these time frames work out for me pretty well because I typically sleep 12am-7am Eastern time. So I automatically avoid the 5am-6am timeframe, and I'm awake for the majority of this system's setups.
Moving stops up to breakeven
This section goes against everything I know and have ever heard about trade management. Please someone find something wrong with my data. I'd love for someone to check my formulas, but I realize that's a pretty insane time commitment to ask of a bunch of strangers. Anyways. What I found was that for these trades moving stops up...basically at all...actually reduced the overall profitability. One of the data points I collected while charting was where the price retraced back to after hitting a certain milestone. i.e. once the price hit the -61.8% profit level, how far back did it retrace before hitting the -100% profit level(if at all)? And same goes for the -100% profit level - how far back did it retrace before hitting the -161.8% profit level(if at all)? Well, some complex excel formulas later and here's what the results appear to be. Emphasis on appears because I honestly don't believe it. I must have done something wrong here, but I've gone over it a hundred times and I can't find anything out of place.
Moving SL up to 0% when the price hits -61.8%, TP at -100%
Winrate: 46.4%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 5.36%
Taking half position off at -61.8%, moving SL up to 0%, TP remaining half at -100%
Winrate: 65.97%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): -1.01% (yes, a net loss)
Now, you might think exactly what I did when looking at these numbers: oof, the spread killed us there right? Because even when you move your SL to 0%, you still end up paying the spread, so it's not truly "breakeven". And because we are trading on a lower timeframe, the spread can be pretty hefty right? Well even when I manually modified the data so that the spread wasn't subtracted(i.e. "Breakeven" was truly +/- 0), things don't look a whole lot better, and still way worse than the passive trade management method of leaving your stops in place and letting it run. And that isn't even a realistic scenario because to adjust out the spread you'd have to move your stoploss inside the candle edge by at least the spread amount, meaning it would almost certainly be triggered more often than in the data I collected(which was purely based on the fib levels and mark price). Regardless, here are the numbers for that scenario:
Moving SL up to 0% when the price hits -61.8%, TP at -100%
Winrate(breakeven doesn't count as a win): 46.4%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 17.97%
Taking half position off at -61.8%, moving SL up to 0%, TP remaining half at -100%
Winrate(breakeven doesn't count as a win): 65.97%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 11.60%
From a literal standpoint, what I see behind this behavior is that 44 of the 69 breakeven trades(65%!) ended up being profitable to -100% after retracing deeply(but not to the original SL level), which greatly helped offset the purely losing trades better than the partial profit taken at -61.8%. And 36 went all the way back to -161.8% after a deep retracement without hitting the original SL. Anyone have any insight into this? Is this a problem with just not enough data? It seems like enough trades that a pattern should emerge, but again I'm no expert. I also briefly looked at moving stops to other lower levels (78.6%, 61.8%, 50%, 38.2%, 23.6%), but that didn't improve things any. No hard data to share as I only took a quick look - and I still might have done something wrong overall. The data is there to infer other strategies if anyone would like to dig in deep(more explanation on the spreadsheet below). I didn't do other combinations because the formulas got pretty complicated and I had already answered all the questions I was looking to answer.
2-Candle vs Confirmation Candle Stops
Another interesting point is that the original system has the SL level(for stop entries) just at the outer edge of the 2-candle pattern that makes up the system. Out of pure laziness, I set up my stops just based on the confirmation candle. And as it turns out, that is much a much better way to go about it. Of the 60 purely losing trades, only 9 of them(15%) would go on to be winners with stops on the 2-candle formation. Certainly not enough to justify the extra loss and/or reduced profits you are exposing yourself to in every single other trade by setting a wider SL. Oddly, in every single scenario where the wider stop did save the trade, it ended up going all the way to the -161.8% profit level. Still, not nearly worth it.
Correlated Trades
As I've said many times now, I'm really not qualified to be doing an analysis like this. This section in particular. Looking at shared currency among the pairs traded, 74 of the trades are correlated. Quite a large group, but it makes sense considering the sort of moves we're looking for with this system. This means you are opening yourself up to more risk if you were to trade on every signal since you are technically trading with the same underlying sentiment on each different pair. For example, GBP/USD and AUD/USD moving together almost certainly means it's due to USD moving both pairs, rather than GBP and AUD both moving the same size and direction coincidentally at the same time. So if you were to trade both signals, you would very likely win or lose both trades - meaning you are actually risking double what you'd normally risk(unless you halve both positions which can be a good option, and is discussed in ParallaxFX's posts and in various other places that go over pair correlation. I won't go into detail about those strategies here). Interestingly though, 17 of those apparently correlated trades ended up with different wins/losses. Also, looking only at trades that were correlated, winrate is 83%/70%/55% (for the three TP levels). Does this give some indication that the same signal on multiple pairs means the signal is stronger? That there's some strong underlying sentiment driving it? Or is it just a matter of too small a sample size? The winrate isn't really much higher than the overall winrates, so that makes me doubt it is statistically significant. One more funny tidbit: EUCAD netted the lowest overall winrate: 30% to even the -61.8% TP level on 10 trades. Seems like that is just a coincidence and not enough data, but dang that's a sucky losing streak. EDIT: WOW I spent some time removing correlated trades manually and it changed the results quite a bit. Some thoughts on this below the results. These numbers also include the other "What I will trade" filters. I added a new worksheet to my data to show what I ended up picking.
Total Trades: 75
Raw Winrates:
TP at -61.8%: 84.00%
TP at -100%: 73.33%
TP at -161.8%: 60.00%
Moving SL up to 0% when the price hits -61.8%, TP at -100%: 53.33%
Taking half position off at -61.8%, moving SL up to 0%, TP remaining half at -100%: 53.33% (yes, oddly the exact same winrate. but different trades/profits)
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account):
TP at -61.8%: 18.13%
TP at -100%: 26.20%
TP at -161.8%: 34.01%
Moving SL up to 0% when the price hits -61.8%, TP at -100%: 19.20%
Taking half position off at -61.8%, moving SL up to 0%, TP remaining half at -100%: 17.29%
To do this, I removed correlated trades - typically by choosing those whose spread had a lower % of the trade width since that's objective and something I can see ahead of time. Obviously I'd like to only keep the winning trades, but I won't know that during the trade. This did reduce the overall sample size down to a level that I wouldn't otherwise consider to be big enough, but since the results are generally consistent with the overall dataset, I'm not going to worry about it too much. I may also use more discretionary methods(support/resistance, quality of indecision/confirmation candles, news/sentiment for the pairs involved, etc) to filter out correlated trades in the future. But as I've said before I'm going for a pretty mechanical system. This brought the 3 TP levels and even the breakeven strategies much closer together in overall profit. It muted the profit from the high R:R strategies and boosted the profit from the low R:R strategies. This tells me pair correlation was skewing my data quite a bit, so I'm glad I dug in a little deeper. Fortunately my original conclusion to use the -161.8 TP level with static stops is still the winner by a good bit, so it doesn't end up changing my actions. There were a few times where MANY (6-8) correlated pairs all came up at the same time, so it'd be a crapshoot to an extent. And the data showed this - often then won/lost together, but sometimes they did not. As an arbitrary rule, the more correlations, the more trades I did end up taking(and thus risking). For example if there were 3-5 correlations, I might take the 2 "best" trades given my criteria above. 5+ setups and I might take the best 3 trades, even if the pairs are somewhat correlated. I have no true data to back this up, but to illustrate using one example: if AUD/JPY, AUD/USD, CAD/JPY, USD/CAD all set up at the same time (as they did, along with a few other pairs on 6/19/20 9:00 AM), can you really say that those are all the same underlying movement? There are correlations between the different correlations, and trying to filter for that seems rough. Although maybe this is a known thing, I'm still pretty green to Forex - someone please enlighten me if so! I might have to look into this more statistically, but it would be pretty complex to analyze quantitatively, so for now I'm going with my gut and just taking a few of the "best" trades out of the handful. Overall, I'm really glad I went further on this. The boosting of the B/E strategies makes me trust my calculations on those more since they aren't so far from the passive management like they were with the raw data, and that really had me wondering what I did wrong.
What I will trade
Putting all this together, I am going to attempt to trade the following(demo for a bit to make sure I have the hang of it, then for keeps):
"System Details" I described above.
TP at -161.8%
Static SL at opposite side of confirmation candle - I won't move stops up to breakeven.
Trade only 7am-11am and 4pm-11pm signals.
Nothing where spread is more than 25% of trade width.
Looking at the data for these rules, test results are:
Winrate: 58.19%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 47.43%
I'll be sure to let everyone know how it goes!
Other Technical Details
ATR is only slightly elevated in this date range from historical levels, so this should fairly closely represent reality even after the COVID volatility leaves the scalpers sad and alone.
The sample size is much too small for anything really meaningful when you slice by hour or pair. I wasn't particularly looking to test a specific pair here - just the system overall as if you were going to trade it on all pairs with a reasonable spread.
Raw Data
Here's the spreadsheet for anyone that'd like it. (EDIT: Updated some of the setups from the last few days that have fully played out now. I also noticed a few typos, but nothing major that would change the overall outcomes. Regardless, I am currently reviewing every trade to ensure they are accurate.UPDATE: Finally all done. Very few corrections, no change to results.) I have some explanatory notes below to help everyone else understand the spiraled labyrinth of a mind that put the spreadsheet together.
I'm on the East Coast in the US, so the timestamps are Eastern time.
Time stamp is from the confirmation candle, not the indecision candle. So 7am would mean the indecision candle was 6:00-6:59 and the confirmation candle is 7:00-7:59 and you'd put in your order at 8:00.
I found a couple AM/PM typos as I was reviewing the data, so let me know if a trade doesn't make sense and I'll correct it.
Insanely detailed spreadsheet notes
For you real nerds out there. Here's an explanation of what each column means:
Pair - duh
Date/Time - Eastern time, confirmation candle as stated above
Win to -61.8%? - whether the trade made it to the -61.8% TP level before it hit the original SL.
Win to -100%? - whether the trade made it to the -100% TP level before it hit the original SL.
Win to -161.8%? - whether the trade made it to the -161.8% TP level before it hit the original SL.
Retracement level between -61.8% and -100% - how deep the price retraced after hitting -61.8%, but before hitting -100%. Be careful to look for the negative signs, it's easy to mix them up. Using the fib% levels defined in ParallaxFX's original thread. A plain hyphen "-" means it did not retrace, but rather went straight through -61.8% to -100%. Positive 100 means it hit the original SL.
Retracement level between -100% and -161.8% - how deep the price retraced after hitting -100%, but before hitting -161.8%. Be careful to look for the negative signs, it's easy to mix them up. Using the fib% levels defined in ParallaxFX's original thread. A plain hyphen "-" means it did not retrace, but rather went straight through -100% to -161.8%. Positive 100 means it hit the original SL.
Trade Width(Pips) - the size of the confirmation candle, and thus the "width" of your trade on which to determine position size, draw fib levels, etc.
Loser saved by 2 candle stop? - for all losing trades, whether or not the 2-candle stop loss would have saved the trade and how far it ended up getting if so. "No" means it didn't save it, N/A means it wasn't a losing trade so it's not relevant.
Spread(ThinkorSwim) - these are typical spreads for these pairs on ToS.
Spread % of Width - How big is the spread compared to the trade width? Not used in any calculations, but interesting nonetheless.
True Risk(Trade Width + Spread) - I set my SL at the opposite side of the confirmation candle knowing that I'm actually exposing myself to slightly more risk because of the spread(stop order = market order when submitted, so you pay the spread). So this tells you how many pips you are actually risking despite the Trade Width. I prefer this over setting the stop inside from the edge of the candle because some pairs have a wide spread that would mess with the system overall. But also many, many of these trades retraced very nearly to the edge of the confirmation candle, before ending up nicely profitable. If you keep your risk per trade at 1%, you're talking a true risk of, at most, 1.25% (in worst-case scenarios with the spread being 25% of the trade width as I am going with above).
Win or Loss in %(1% risk) including spread TP -61.8% - not going to go into huge detail, see the spreadsheet for calculations if you want. But, in a nutshell, if the trade was a win to 61.8%, it returns a positive # based on 61.8% of the trade width, minus the spread. Otherwise, it returns the True Risk as a negative. Both normalized to the 1% risk you started with.
Win or Loss in %(1% risk) including spread TP -100% - same as the last, but 100% of Trade Width.
Win or Loss in %(1% risk) including spread TP -161.8% - same as the last, but 161.8% of Trade Width.
Win or Loss in %(1% risk) including spread TP -100%, and move SL to breakeven at 61.8% - uses the retracement level columns to calculate profit/loss the same as the last few columns, but assuming you moved SL to 0% fib level after price hit -61.8%. Then full TP at 100%.
Win or Loss in %(1% risk) including spread take off half of position at -61.8%, move SL to breakeven, TP 100% - uses the retracement level columns to calculate profit/loss the same as the last few columns, but assuming you took of half the position and moved SL to 0% fib level after price hit -61.8%. Then TP the remaining half at 100%.
Overall Growth(-161.8% TP, 1% Risk) - pretty straightforward. Assuming you risked 1% on each trade, what the overall growth level would be chronologically(spreadsheet is sorted by date).
Pairs
AUD/CAD
AUD/CHF
AUD/JPY
AUD/NZD
AUD/USD
CAD/CHF
CAD/JPY
CHF/JPY
EUAUD
EUCAD
EUCHF
EUGBP
EUJPY
EUNZD
EUUSD
GBP/AUD
GBP/CAD
GBP/CHF
GBP/JPY
GBP/NZD
GBP/USD
NZD/CAD
NZD/CHF
NZD/JPY
NZD/USD
USD/CAD
USD/CHF
USD/JPY
TL;DR
Based on the reasonable rules I discovered in this backtest:
Date range: 6/11-7/3
Winrate: 58.19%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 47.43%
Demo Trading Results
Since this post, I started demo trading this system assuming a 5k capital base and risking ~1% per trade. I've added the details to my spreadsheet for anyone interested. The results are pretty similar to the backtest when you consider real-life conditions/timing are a bit different. I missed some trades due to life(work, out of the house, etc), so that brought my total # of trades and thus overall profit down, but the winrate is nearly identical. I also closed a few trades early due to various reasons(not liking the price action, seeing support/resistance emerge, etc). A quick note is that TD's paper trade system fills at the mid price for both stop and limit orders, so I had to subtract the spread from the raw trade values to get the true profit/loss amount for each trade. I'm heading out of town next week, then after that it'll be time to take this sucker live!
86 Trades
Date range: 7/9-7/30
Winrate: 52.32%
Adjusted Proft % (takes spread into account): 20.73%
Starting Balance: $5,000
Ending Balance: $6,036.51
Live Trading Results
I started live-trading this system on 8/10, and almost immediately had a string of losses much longer than either my backtest or demo period. Murphy's law huh? Anyways, that has me spooked so I'm doing a longer backtest before I start risking more real money. It's going to take me a little while due to the volume of trades, but I'll likely make a new post once I feel comfortable with that and start live trading again.
[Econ] uwaaah!~~ senpai, i can't handle the japanese yen. it's too big for me >.<
While Japanese tourists and investors are currently rejoicing at the appreciation of the JPY against most currencies, company executives and METI ministers are readying their tanto and are currently searching for an assistant to decapitate them. Too bad everyone else is getting ready for seppuku too. I jest, but METI and company executives are (to put it lightly), fucking terrified about the JPY’s newfound mastery in these current times. Although firms, tourists, and investors find it easier than ever to do business overseas, exporters are seething from the recent appreciation of the Yen. In addition, the pegging of SE Asian currencies to the Yen and China’s suspected increase in JPY reserves (although yet to be confirmed) have cemented the JPY as an possible replacement for the USD, something that is very bad for Japan’s export economy. To combat this, the BOJ has to change course from its conservative, restrictionary monetary policy (enacted to prevent a bubble economy) to a liberal monetary policy. One may ask, doesn’t this increase the probability of a bubble economy forming? Well, the BOJ has calculated that its conservative monetary policies have averted a bubble from forming. As we saw in 2029 and 2030, GDP growth was lower than predicted back in 2025, indicating that investors weren’t as bullish as before. In addition, strict financial regulations ensured that the predatory and dangerous loans of the 80s and early 90s didn’t make a comeback. Asset prices and land values, despite a nominal increase, did not soar to unreasonable heights. So what is the BOJ doing now? Inflation Japanese inflation has been very low the past three decades, using hovering around the 0.5-1% mark. Although inflation has seen a small increase during the 2020s Asian Economic Boom, it is still around 1%. In response to this, the BOJ has set an inflation goal of 2.5% for 2031 and 2032. The BOJ intends to reach this goal through three methods. 1) Interest and discount rates are to be tempered to 1.50% and 1.75% respectively. This should encourage lending between banks and companies, leading to more liquidity and more spending. 2) Buying back BOJ-issued bonds, focusing on foreign investors first. This will increase the money supply while simultaneously paying back more debt. 3) Quantitative easing increases the money supply and should increase inflation and devaluation of the JPY. These actions, in addition, to increasing inflation (and in turn stimulating domestic consumption), should help to devalue the JPY. Other measures to devalue the JPY are as follows. Depreciation of the JPY As an export-based economy, any appreciation of the JPY is very, very bad for Japan, as one saw during the 1990s. The JPY recently broke the $95 USD mark, with no sign of the appreciation stopping. The BOJ has stated that it intends to block this appreciation of the JPY will all its might, and is targeting a return to the $100 mark. It intends to do by the following methods. 1) Increasing FOREX reserves: Right now the BOJ holds around $2.2 trillion in FOREX, mainly in USD and EUR. Following rumors that China has significantly increased its FOREX reserves (analysts estimate between $500 and $800 billion in new reserves), the BOJ has announced its intentions to follow suit. It has announced an increase in FOREX reserves of $450 billion in USD, EUR, and CNY. ($200 billion in USD, $150 billion in EUR, $100 billion in CNY) This should help depreciate the JPY relative to these currencies and help exporters. 2) Japanese companies who have overseas plants like Toyota, Honda, and Nissan are being encouraged to reinvest USD garnered overseas into Japan. In addition to stimulating the domestic economy, this should also increase FOREX supply in Japan. Miscellaneous 1) Domestic consumption tax rate is decreased form 8% to 6.8%. 2) Seeking to exploit the capital and investor flight from the US, a new campaign to attract foreign investment and foreign executives to settle in Japan will be launched. Titled “Land of the Rising Profits”, it will showcase the benefits of setting up shop in Japan as an investor.
Unpopular opinion: I believe the ROI on most financial careers relative to the certificates and experience needed to land an entry level position is becoming negative. Here is my own personal experience as to why..
I was planning on taking my CFA and CPA but due to the economic downturn caused by Covid, i postponed my studying and decided to pursue my side hobbies investing in Forex, options and investing in equities, primarily techs and small caps. This was not necessarily planned, but since I got laid off my previous Credit Analyst position, I needed income to make ends meet as the stimulus cheque’s were not enough to cover most of my fixed expenses. I’ve been putting in at least 6hrs+ a day since being laid off in March analyzing trading strategies and evaluating investment opportunities. Most of this info I learned from my classes during my 4th year. I’m a Finance Major abs have been interested in personal investing since I was a junior so it wasn’t as hard as starting from scratch. I’ve steadily increased my income to about $6k a month, for the last 4 months, mostly from Tesla, AMD and zoom call options and the rest from trading EUUSD and the USD/JPY currency pairs in Forex, although highly leveraged. I don’t use any indicators and primarily trade using price action as I believe most indicators are lagging to begin with. I was making the same amount as a recent graduate and hope to increase this investment income to 10k/month hopefully by year end or early next year. through this experience, I feel like the ROI of studying investment opportunities far exceed the potential benefits of certificates and employment in the long run. What are your thoughts on the ROI of finance careers relative to the certifications, time commitment, and opportunity costs needed to get here? Especially as new grads with no experience? Thoughts?
Các phiên giao dịch trong thị trường đầu tư Forex – Phần 1
Bạn đã tìm hiểu về thị trườngđầu tư Forex, bạn biết tại sao chúng ta nên giao dịch Forex và ai tạo nên thị trường này. Đã đến lúc bạn học khi nào chúng ta có thể giao dịch Forex. Như đã từng đề cập trước đó, thị trường đầu tư Forex mở cửa 24 giờ 1 ngày, nhưng điều đó không có nghĩa nó luôn luôn giao dịch sôi động. Bạn có thể tìm kiếm lợi nhuận khi thị trường lên hoặc xuống nhưng bạn sẽ gặp rất nhiều khó khăn nếu thị trường không chuyển động hoặc chuyển động quá yếu ớt. Và hãy tin tôi, bạn sẽ gặp thời điểm mà thị trường gần như “bất động”. Video hôm nay sẽ giúp bạn xác định khi nào là thời điểm tốt nhất trong ngày để giao dịch. Giờ của thị trường Thị trường ngoại hối được chia thành bốn phiên giao dịch chính : phiên Sydney, phiên giao dịch Tokyo, phiên giao dịch London và phiên New York. Bên dưới là bảng chi tiết thời gian đóng, mở cửa của mỗi phiên. Bạn có thể thấy rằng giữa mỗi phiên, có 1 khoảng thời gian mà cả 2 phiên cùng mở cửa một lúc. Từ 3:00 – 4:00 am EDT, phiên Tokyo và phiên London trùng nhau, và từ 8:00-12:00 am EDT, phiên London và phiên New York trùng nhau. Dĩ nhiên, đây là khoảng thời gian sôi động nhất trong một ngày giao dịch với khối lượng giao dịch nhiều hơn, do cả 2 thị trường cùng mở cửa. Điều này có nghĩa, trong suốt thời gian này, tất cả các nhà giao dịch của cả 2 thị trường đều cùng giao dịch và số lượng tiền trao đổi nhiều hơn. Bây giờ, có lẽ bạn đang nhìn giờ mở cửa của Sydney và suy nghĩ tại sao nó thay đổi 2 giờ đồng hồ. Bạn sẽ cho rằng, phiên mở của Sydney chỉ dời 1 tiếng khi Mỹ thay đổi thành East Standard Time (EST), nhưng bạn hãy nhớ rằng, khi Mỹ lùi lại 1 tiếng, thì Sydney lại tăng thêm 1 tiếng (các mùa đổi ngược tại Úc). Bạn nên ghi nhớ điều này nếu bạn dự định giao dịch trong thời điểm đó. Nào, giờ ta hãy xem số lượng pips di chuyển của các cặp tiền chính trong mỗi phiên giao dịch. Bạn có thể dễ dàng thấy thị trường đầu tư Forex di chuyển nhiều nhất tại thời điểm phiên London đang mở cửa. Tiếp theo, chúng ta sẽ xem xét sâu hơn về từng phiên giao dịch, cũng như các thời điểm mà 2 phiên chồng lên nhau. Phiên Tokyo Giờ mở cửa của phiên Châu Á vào 7:00pm EST đánh dấu sự bắt đầu của đồng hồ Forex. Bạn nên lưu ý rằng, phiên Tokyo đôi khi được gọi là phiên Châu Á, bởi vì Tokyo là thủ đô tài chính của Châu Á. Một điểm đáng chú ý nữa là Nhật Bản giao dịch ngoại hối lớn thứ ba trên thế giới. Điều này cũng không quá ngạc nhiên kể từ khi đồng Yên là đồng tiền thứ 3 được giao dịch nhiều nhất, chiếm 16.50% của tất cả các giao dịch ngoại hối. Nhìn chung, khoảng 21% tất cả các giao dịch ngoại hối diễn ra trong phiên này. Sau đây là một số đặc điểm quan trọng mà bạn nên biết về phiên Tokyo: Hoạt động này không chỉ giới hạn trong nước Nhật. Có một khối lượng lớn các giao dịch Forex đến từ các điểm nóng tài chính khác như Hong Kong, Singapore và Sydney. Những người tham gia chính trong trong phiên Tokyo là công ty thương mại (chủ yếu là công ty xuất khẩu) và ngân hàng trung ương. Hãy nhớ rằng, nền kinh tế của Nhật Bản phụ thuộc rất nhiều vào xuất khẩu, và với Trung Quốc cũng là một điểm giao dịch sôi động với rất nhiều giao dịch được thực hiện mỗi ngày. Tính thanh khoản đôi khi rất nhỏ. Sẽ có khi giao dịch trong thời gian này như bạn đi câu cá vậy, bạn phải chờ 1 thời gian dài, rất lâu trước khi nhận được kết quả. Nhiều khả năng bạn sẽ thấy di chuyển mạnh mẽ hơn ở các cặp tiền tệ Châu Á như AUD/USD và NZD/USD. Trong khoảng thời gian thanh khoản thấp, hầu hết các tiền có lẽ sẽ dao động trong một biên độ. Điều này tạo một cơ hội để giao dịch ngắn hạn hoặc có khả năng giao dịch break out trong ngày. Hầu hết các hoạt động giao dịch được diễn ra vào đầu phiên, khi mà nhiều hơn các tin tức kinh tế được phát hành. Sự biến động từ phiên Tokyo có thể thiết lập xu hướng còn lại trong ngày. Nhà giao dịch sẽ xem xét những gì xảy ra tại phiên Tokyo và từ đó tổ chức và đánh giá chiến lược cho các phiên tiếp theo. Thông thường sau một sự di chuyển mạnh mẽ từ phiên New York, bạn có thể thấy sự đồng thuận cùng xu hướng trong phiên Tokyo. Cũng giống như 2 phiên trên, câu hỏi được đặt ra là bạn nên giao dịch cặp tiền tệ nào? Trong phiên Tokyo, cũng là thời điểm mà tin tức từ Australia, New Zealand, và Nhật sẽ phát hành, do đó đây là cơ hội tốt để giao dịch theo tin tức. Ngoài ra, các cặp tiền tệ của đồng Yên cũng có thể di chuyển mạnh hơn do các công ty Nhật Bản đang tiến hành công việc kinh doanh của họ. Lưu ý rằng Trung Quốc cũng là một siêu cường kinh tế, do đó khi có tin tức phát đi từ Trung Quốc, nó có xu hướng tạo một biến động mạnh mẽ. Với Australia và Nhật Bản cũng phụ thuộc rất nhiều và nhu cầu từ Trung Quốc, do đó ta có sẽ thấy sự di chuyển mạnh hơn với AUD và JPY khi tin tức của Trung Quốc được phát hành. Vậy là bạn đã biết về phiên giao dịch đầu tiên, bây giờ hãy tiếp tục xem bạn có thể giao dịch thế nào tại phiên London. Phiên London Khi thị trường Châu Á bắt đầu đóng cửa là lúc thị trường Châu Âu bắt đầu 1 ngày mới. Có rất nhiều trung tâm tài chính trên khắp Châu Âu, và London là thị trường mà người tham gia chú ý nhất. Trong lịch sử, London luôn là một trung tâm giao dịch thương mại, nhờ vào vị trí chiến lược của nó. Không có gì ngạc nhiên khi London được coi là vốn ngoại tệ của thế giới với hàng ngàn doanh nhân thực hiện giao dịch mỗi phút. Ước tính khoảng 30% giao dịch ngoại hối được thực hiện trong phiên London. Đây là một vài nét ngắn gọn về phiên Châu Âu : Bởi vì phiên London nối giữa 2 phiên giao dịch lớn cửa thị trường đầu tư Forex, và London là một trung tâm tài chính quan trọng, phần lớn các giao dịch ngoại hối diễn ra trong phiên này. Điều này kéo theo sự thanh khoản cao và chi phí giao dịch thấp hơn, ví dụ chi phí spread thấp hơn. Do số lương lớn các giao dịch diễn ra, phiên London thường là phiên giao dịch sôi động nhất. Hầu hết các xu hướng của giá bắt đầu từ phiên London, và chúng sẽ kéo dài đến khi bắt đầu phiên New York. Xu hướng biến động sẽ giảm ở giữa phiên, khi các nhà giao dịch thường đi ăn trưa trước khi chờ đợi phiên New York mở cửa. Xu hướng đôi khi bị đảo ngược vào cuối phiên London, khi mà các nhà giao dịch Châu Âu quyết định chốt lời giao dịch của họ. Vậy bạn nên giao dịch cặp tiền tệ nào? Bởi vì khối lượng giao dịch đầu tư Forex diễn ra lớn, tính thanh khoản cao trong suốt thời gian của phiên Châu Âu, cho nên hầu hết các cặp tiền đều có thể được giao dịch. Tất nhiên, tốt nhất vẫn là các cặp chính (EUUSD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY,và USD/CHF) với phí spread thường là thấp nhất. Ngoài ra, còn có các cặp thường bị ảnh hưởng trực tiếp từ các báo cáo tin tức được phát hành trong phiên Châu Âu. Bạn cũng có thể thử với đồng Yên (như EUJPY và GBP/JPY) khi mà xu hướng của nó thường biến động vào thời điểm này. Tuy nhiên, do đây là những cặp lai, spread của nó có thể sẽ lớn hơn một chút.
Lowest average spread currency to potentially trade 24/5?
Hi, I'm new to forex and I've been trading on a demo account for 2 or 3 months. And I have a good strategy that gave me consistent profits. I prefer trading one currency for long periods of time because it's easier to keep track off and just simplifies things. I know different pairings have different spread levels at different times of the day, but on average what's a good pairing to stick to if you want to trade the same pairing for long periods of time? I've been trading the USD/JPY and had a lot of success. Should I just stick to that or maybe switch over to EUUSD or GPB/USD? But I've also noticed that the dollar seems to be the dominant currency and therefore all the dollar pairings pretty much move pretty similarly at similar times. So what currency has the lowest average spread based on a 24h period and does it make sense to switch?
Python Web Scraping: Need help writing this code without repeating it 26 times
I'm writing this web scraping program that takes the forex retail trading sentiment from IG Markets and displays it in the console. Here's the code I got so far:
This code is for 2 pairs, however, I need the output for 26 pairs and I don't want to type the url 26 times. Is there a way to do this? I was thinking lists or dictionaries but don't know where to start. BTW, I'm new to programming, I just read Automate the boring stuff up to the web scraping chapter and that's how I wrote this. Thank you. EDIT: I got it pair_list = ['eur-chf', 'eur-aud', 'eur-jpy'] for i in range(len(pair_list)): retail_positions = getIGsentiment('https://www.ig.com/us/forex/markets-forex/' + (pair_list[i])) pair = pair_list[i] print(pair, retail_positions[0:32].rstrip() + '.')
Since mid-April, financial tensions have been easing in the emerging countries. Bolstered by the very gradual return of portfolio investment, exchange rates have stabilised.
Since mid-May, cumulative net inflows of non-resident portfolio investment into bond and equity markets amounted to USD 22 bn (according to data from the Institute for International Finance (IIF) for a selection of 20 emerging countries), compared to cumulative net outflows of USD 100 bn from the end of February to mid-May
As a result, the emerging market currencies have regained some of the ground lost in the first 3 to 4 months of the year (+1.6% on average since mid-March, vs. -6% in Q1). Equity prices, in contrast, have erased most of their losses (+17% on average since the end of March, vs. -20% in Q1). Is this normalisation process, which is very advanced in the equity markets, truly justified?
cyclical indicators suggest a recovery in H2 2020. Yet the size and diffusion of the recovery remains highly uncertain. For this reason, the rebound in local equity markets seems a bit excessive and even premature. In Brazil, India and Mexico, the pandemic is not under control, and some governments have even imposed new, selective lockdowns.
Despite the surge in fiscal deficits, for the moment we have not observed any difficulties in refinancing public debt. Bond yields have been held down through conventional monetary easing (via policy rate cuts, which have been widespread throughout the emerging countries) and/or through quantitative easing (by expanding the ways in which central banks can refinance banks and indirectly companies, or through the monetary financing of fiscal deficits). Yet if the pandemic persists, this financial support will not prevent an upsurge in delinquencies and non-performing loans.
Lastly, higher risk premiums on sovereign debt in the local currency increase the attractiveness of carry trades and the inflow of volatile capital at a time when the emerging countries need financial stability even more than usual. For of a selection of 17 emerging countries, the median yield spread between the sovereign bond and a bond with an equivalent maturity in the financing currency (USD, EUR or JPY) remained stable at about 450 basis points (bp) between end-December 2019 and end-June 2020. But this spread must be looked at in terms of foreign exchange volatility to evaluate the profitability of the carry trade. After taking into account the policy rate differential, and thus the possibility of short-term foreign exchange coverage of positions (via the futures market or currency swaps), the median yield spread has nearly tripled, from 80bp to 200bp. For investors ready to take the risk of rolling over very short-term forex hedges, the spread is very attractive.
Hey Guys, New to Forex. I've been reading up for about a year, watching seminars, but I'm still having some trouble understanding the full basics. For example, if I think the USD is going to appreciate against the EUR am I buying USA/EUR or EUUSD? Also, where is the best way to find how information is impacting the market. For example, if I wanted to make a play in AUS/JPY where would I find the best reports on them and what they mean? Any other tips would help. I'm about to open a demo account to start practicing, I hope to start real money in about a year.
Trading YYY/ZZZ pair with XXX currency (related to question in FAQ)
I am learning alot about forex but I have not found an explicit answer to this question. I am a bit confused about trading a pair of currencies when I do not own either currency. For example, my account is funded with CAD, so if I trade USD/EUR, am I not risking cancelling out potential gains or multiplying losses based on the fluctuation of CAD/USD at the same time? The answer to this question in the FAQ makes it sounds like it is a non issue: From the FAQ:
" I AM CONFUSED ABOUT THIS - HOW CAN I GET CURRENCY XXX IF I'M TRADING YYY/ZZZ?? This confuses many new traders. When you create your FX account, you will be nominating what the base currency is, this is usually the currency where you live. Live in the United States? USD. Live in Canada? CAD. Live in Tokyo? JPY. Live in The EU? EUR and so on.... That is the currency that all trades will be paid out in. The pairs that you trade have no bearing on this outcome. It may help to think of it in this way: "I am going long / going short on the asset known as USD/JPY and will be paid out in my base currency." Don't look at the pair you are trading as multiple exchanges, look at it as a single vehicle, this may help you."
From a risk mitigation stand point, would it be best practice to only trade pairs based on CAD/XXX or would it make more sense to convert my CAD funds to USD for the long term and gamble that the exchange rate remains roughly constant? If there are any resources you know of that address this question, please let me know! Thanks!
Hello friends. I’m not new to trading however I’ve only been trading forex for about 6 months. I am aware that I will need to focus on only a couple of pairs to be consistent. Here is what I have been zeroed in on.. USD/JPY - most fav so far GBP/USD - makes me nervous... but I’ve been making the right decisions so this one has been good to me. EUUSD - mehhh So.. does anyone have any input? I won’t be trading more than three pairs. If you would swap one of these out what pair would you replace with and why? Thanks and good luck! Winter is coming.
I’m new to forex, and I’m looking for a regulated US broker. After research, I found that OANDA complied with FIFO laws, and I was wondering if FIFO made it so I couldn’t close my positions in any order even if my positions are on different symbols (ex: open buy on USD/JPY at 1:00, open buy on EUUSD at 1:05, would I not be able to close EUUSD until I close USD/JPY?)
My writing is not great, so hang in there. Also, long post. On Feb 28 2020 I set up an account on Oanda to begin my Forex journey. A friend of mine got me into the idea, saying he has been working with his dad that does this fool* time and it's a great way to make money. "I'm no dumbo and follow wall-street bets" I says, but he assured me THIS was different. I did some basic research (youtube) and thought to myself, heck, it's money up or down. That's tight. I came into looking to make a little bit of money, not an astronomical amount. I have a full-time job and two kids, so I'm not looking to end up homeless. I started my account with $1k seed, and the plan was make the $1k seed money back, pull that out, and have new $1k to play with. I thought I would achieve this goal in perhaps two months time. Starting out the trades I have made has been conservative, in units of 300-500. The very first trade I made was EUJPY @ 100 units. I lost $0.40. It was magical. I had no idea what exactly was happening and the entire dashboard was crazy looking to me. I decided then that I really wanted to learn and I took seriously to the research that I was doing. I quickly found out that the news was a great tool in making market decisions. Looking at the history of currency pairs could also aid one in making informed decisions. At this moment I made my first self rule: Make informed and guesstimated trade decisions. I started to journal my trades and the ideas behind making these decisions. This gave me the feedback I needed when a trade went right or wrong for me. I could go back and understand why I did that, instead of just guessing. This also held me accountable for making informed decisions, going back to rule 1. Rule 2 came shortly after that. I was given a recommendation on a pair to go long on a pair. I looked at the data and my head said nah, don't do that. But I thought to myself, well his dad has been doing this fool* time so let's go for it. Big mistake there. That was my first true loss. Up until this point I had only taken small losses in the form of cents. This was my first double digit loss. It hurt, but not a whole lot. Rule 2: Don't blindly follow. Make your own decisions. Two weeks have gone by and I had made $1000.00! I got my seed money back! I was feeling good and put in my first big order, 10,000 units short on USD/JPY. BIG HIT of $300+. I was sky high. I did it again alllllll the way at the bottom of what I just closed at. The next morning was rude to me. I woke up with -$400 going against me. I panicked and took the L and started panic buying trying just to make up a little bit of lost cash. I kept digging myself deeper. At the end of the day I lost around $500. I took a day or two off from that and I made my third rule: Don't panic sell or buy. I regained my composure and studied what I felt and why I reacted the way I did. To understand that the market can move against you is fine, and if I had stuck to rule 1 of informed trades, I would have been fine. Shortly after I had a 60.000 unit USD/CAD long hit -$800. This time I did not panic and I continued about my business. That ended up being on of the most profitable trades I have had, all thanks to Rule 3: Don't panic. My last (so far) rule was born from the deadly sin of greed. That bastard; he was hard to kill. Seeing those dollar signs go up, up, up and way is so exciting. And then physics happens. Too often have I found myself in the situation of being able to make the same trade multiple times just because of the swing. This doesn't happen all the time and you can't really know if it is going to happen, but sometimes it's pretty easy to see. Rule 4: Take the profit. Now, I sell when I feel like I need to sell. If my gut says end it, I end it. I don't have remorse if I end a trade early. I came out with money I never had and I didn't lose money I never had either. Win/Win. It is now 2 days away from being a month since I started trading. In that amount of time I have ended up with a Realized P/L of $3,036.55 at the time of writing this post. I am not writing this to brag or to look for high-fives and pats on the back. I am not naive that all of this can go very wrong with one click of a button. But I am proud of myself and at the fact that perhaps this could become my side-hustle in conjunction with my full-time job. I am still making rules for myself and still have a lot to learn. Happy trading, space cowboy.
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I am a professional Day Trader working for a Prop Fund, Hope I can help people out and answer some questions
Howdy all, I work professionally for a proprietary trading fund, and have worked for quite a few in my time, hope I can offer some insights on trading etc you guys might have. Bonus for you guys Here are the columns in my trading journal and various explanations where appropriate: Trade Number – Simply is this the first trade of the year? The 10th?, The 50th? I count a trade that you opened and closed just one trade number. For example if you buy EUUSD today and sell it 50 pips later in the day and close out the trade, then that is just one trade for recording purposes. I do not create a second trade number to describe the exit. Both the entry and exit are under the same trade number. Ticket Number – This is ticket number / order ID number that your broker gives you for the trade on your platform. Day of the Week – This would be simply the day of the week the trade was initiated Financial Instrument / Currency Pair – Whatever Financial Instrument or currency pair you are trading. If you are trading EUUSD, put EUUSD. If you are trading the EuroFX futures contract, then put in Euro FX. If you are trading the emini S&P, then put in Emini S&P 500. If you are trading a stock, put in the ticker symbol. Etc. Buy/Sell or Long/Short – Did you buy or sell to open the new trade? If you bought something to open the trade, then write in either BUY or LONG. If you sold(shorted) something to open a trade, then write in SOLD, or SHORT. This is a personal preference. Some people like to put in their journals as BUY/SELL. Other people like to write in Long/Short. My preference is for writing in long/short, since that is the more professional way to say it. I like to use the lingo where possible. Order Type – Market or Limit – When you entered the trade was it a market order or limit order? Some people can enter a trade using a combination of market and limit orders. If you enter a trade for $1 million half of which was market order and the other half was limit order, then you can write in $500,000 Market, $500,000 Limit as a bullet points. Position Size / Units / Contracts / Shares – How big was the total trade you entered? If you bought 1 standard lot of a currency pair, then write in $100,000 or 1 standard lot. If you bought 5 gold futures contracts, then write in 5 contracts. If you bought 1,000 shares of stock, then write in 1,000 shares. Etc. Entry Price – The entry price you received entering your opening position. If you entered at multiple prices, then you can either write in all the different fills you got, or specify the average price received. Entry Date – Date that you entered the position. For example January 23, 2012. Or you can write in 1/23/12 . Entry Time – Time that you opened the position. If it is multiple positions, then you can specify each time for each various fill, or you can specify the time range. For example if you got $100,000 worth of EUUSD filled at 3:00 AM EST, and another $100,000 filled at 3:05 and another $100,000 filled at 3:25, then you can write all those in, or you can specify a range of 3:00 – 3:30 AM EST. Entry Spread Cost (in pips) – This is optional if you want to keep track of your spread cost in pips. If you executed a market order, how many pips did you pay in spread. Entry Spread Cost (in dollars) – This is optional if you want to keep track of your spread cost in dollars. If you executed a market order, how many dollars did you pay in spread. Stop Loss Size – How big is your stop loss size? If you are trading a currency pair, then you write in the pips. If you are trading the S&P futures contract, then write in the number of points. If you are trading a stock, then write in how many cents or dollars your stop is away from your entry price. % Risk – If you were to get stopped out of the trade, how much % loss of your equity is that? This is where you input your risk per trade expressed in % terms if you use such a position sizing method. If you risked 0.50% of your account on the trade, then put in 0.50% Risk in dollars – If you were to get stopped out of the trade, how much loss in dollars is that. For example if you have a $100,000 account and you risked 1% on a trade, then write in $1,000 dollars Potential Reward: Risk Ratio – This is a column that I only sometimes fill in. You write in what the potential reward risk ratio of the trade is. If you are trading using a 100 pip stop and you expect that the market can reasonably move 300 pips, then you can write in 3:1. Of course this is an interesting column because you can look at it after the trade is finished and see how close you were or how far removed from reality your initial projections were. Potential Win Rate – This is another column that I only sometimes fill in. You write in what you believe the potential win rate of this trade is. If you were to place this trade 10 times in a row, how many times do you think you would win? I write it in as percentage terms. If you believe the trade has a 50% chance to win, then write in 50%. Type of Inefficiency – This is where you write in what type of inefficiency you are looking to capture. I use the word inefficiency here. I believe it is important to think of trading setups as inefficiencies. If you think in terms of inefficiencies, then you will think in terms of the market being mispriced, then you will think about the reasons why the market is mispriced and why such market expectations for example are out of alignment with reality. In this category I could write in different types of trades such as fading the stops, different types of news trades, expecting stops to get tripped, betting on sentiment intensifying, betting on sentiment reversing, etc. I do not write in all the reasons why I took the trade in this column. I do that in another column. This column is just to broadly define what type of inefficiency you are looking to capture. Chart Time Frame – I do not use this since all my order flow based trades have nothing to do with what chart time frame I look at. However, if you are a chartist or price action trader, then you may want to include what chart time frame you found whatever pattern you were looking at. Exit Price – When you exit your trade, you enter the price you received here. Exit Date – The date you exited your trade. Exit Time – The time you exited your trade. Trade Duration – In hours, minutes, days or weeks. If the trade lasts less than an hour, I will usually write in the duration in minutes. Anything in between 1 and 48 hours, I write in the hours amount. Anything past that and I write it as days or weeks as appropriate, etc. Pips the trade went against you before turning into a winner – If you have a trade that suffered a draw down, but did not stop you out and eventually was a winner, then you write it how many pips the trade went against you before it turned into a profitable trade. The reason you have this column is to compare it to your stop loss size and see any patterns that emerge. If you notice that a lot of your winning trades suffer a big draw down and get near your stop loss points but turn out to be a profitable trade, then you can further refine your entry strategy to get in a better price. Slippage on the Exit – If you get stopped out for a loss, then you write in how many pips you suffered as slippage, if any. For example if you are long EUUSD at 1.2500 and have your stop loss at 1.2400 and the market drops and you get filled at 1.2398, then you would write in -2 pips slippage. In other words you lost 2 pips as slippage. This is important for a few different reasons. Firstly, you want to see if the places you put your stop at suffer from slippage. If they do, perhaps you can get better stop loss placement, or use it as useful information to find new inefficiencies. Secondly, you want to see how much slippage your broker is giving you. If you are trading the same system with different brokers, then you can record the slippage from each one and see which has the lowest slippage so you can choose them. Profit/Loss -You write in the profit and/or loss in pips, cents, points, etc as appropriate. If you bought EUUSD at 1.2500 and sell it at 1.2550, you made 50 pips, so write in +50 pips. If you bought a stock at $50 and you sell it at $60, then write in +$10. If you buy the S&P futures at 1,250 and sell them at 1,275, then write in +25 points. If you buy the GBP/USD at 1.5000 and you sell it at 1.4900, then write in -100 pips. Etc. I color code the box background to green for profit and red for loss. Profit/Loss In Dollars – You write the profit and/or loss in dollars (or euros, or jpy, etc whatever currency your account is denominated in). If you are long $100,000 of EUUSD at 1.2500 and sell it at 1.2600, then write in +$1,000. If you are short $100,000 GBP/USD at 1.5900 and it rises to 1.6000 and you cover, then write in -$1,000. I color code the box background to green for profit and red for loss. Profit/Loss as % of your account – Write in the profit and/or loss as % of your account. If a trade made you 2% of your account, then write in +2%. If a trade lost 0.50%, then write in -0.50%. I color code the box background to green for profit and red for loss. Reward:Risk Ratio or R multiple: If the trade is a profit, then write in how many times your risk did it pay off. If you risked 0.50% and you made 1.00%, then write in +2R or 2:1 or 2.0. If you risked 0.50% and a trade only makes 0.10%, then write in +0.20R or 0.2:1 or 0.2. If a trade went for a loss that is equal to or less than what you risked, then I do not write in anything. If the loss is greater than the amount you risked, then I do write it in this column. For example lets say you risk 0.50% on a stock, but overnight the market gaps and you lose 1.50% on a trade, then I would write it in as a -3R. What Type of trading loss if the trade lost money? – This is where I describe in very general terms a trade if it lost money. For example, if I lost money on a trade and the reason was because I was buying in a market that was making fresh lows, but after I bought the market kept on going lower, then I would write in: “trying to pick a bottom.” If I tried shorting into a rising uptrend and I take a loss, then I describe it as “trying to pick a top.” If I am buying in an uptrend and buy on a retracement, but the market makes a deeper retracement or trend change, then I write in “tried to buy a ret.” And so on and so forth. In very general terms I describe it. The various ways I use are: • Trying to pick a bottom • Trying to pick a top • Shorting a bottom • Buying a top • Shorting a ret and failed • Wrongly predicted news • Bought a ret and failed • Fade a resistance level • Buy a support level • Tried to buy a breakout higher • Tried to short a breakout lower I find this category very interesting and important because when performing trade journal analysis, you can notice trends when you have winners or losing trades. For example if I notice a string of losing trades and I notice that all of them occur in the same market, and all of them have as a reason: “tried to pick a bottom”, then I know I was dumb for trying to pick a bottom five times in a row. I was fighting the macro order flow and it was dumb. Or if I notice a string of losers and see that I tried to buy a breakout and it failed five times in a row, but notice that the market continued to go higher after I was stopped out, then I realize that I was correct in the move, but I just applied the wrong entry strategy. I should have bought a retracement, instead of trying to buy a fresh breakout. That Day’s Weaknesses (If any) – This is where I write in if there were any weaknesses or distractions on the day I placed the trade. For example if you are dead tired and place a trade, then write in that you were very tired. Or if you place a trade when there were five people coming and out of your trading office or room in your house, then write that in. If you placed the trade when the fire alarm was going off then write that in. Or if you place a trade without having done your daily habits, then write that in. Etc. Whatever you believe was a possible weakness that threw you off your game. That Day’s Strengths (If any) – Here you can write in what strengths you had during the day you placed your trade. If you had complete peace and quiet, write that in. If you completed all your daily habits, then write that in. Etc. Whatever you believe was a possible strength during the day. How many Open Positions Total (including the one you just placed) – How many open trades do you have after placing this one? If you have zero open trades and you just placed one, then the total number of open positions would be one, so write in “1.” If you have on three open trades, and you are placing a new current one, then the total number of open positions would be four, so write in “4.” The reason you have this column in your trading journal is so that you can notice trends in winning and losing streaks. Do a lot of your losing streaks happen when you have on a lot of open positions at the same time? Do you have a winning streak when the number of open positions is kept low? Or can you handle a lot of open positions at the same time? Exit Spread Cost (in pips) – This is optional if you want to keep track of your spread cost in pips. If you executed a market order, how many pips did you pay in spread. Exit Spread Cost (in dollars) – This is optional if you want to keep track of your spread cost in dollars. If you executed a market order, how many dollars did you pay in spread. Total Spread Cost (in pips) – You write in the total spread cost of the entry and exit in pips. Total Spread Cost (in dollars) – You write in the total spread cost of the entry and exit in dollars. Commission Cost – Here you write in the total commission cost that you incurred for getting in and out of the trade. If you have a forex broker that is commission free and only gets compensated through the spread, then you do not need this column. Starting Balance – The starting account balance that you had prior to the placing of the trade Interest/swap – If you hold forex currency pairs past the rollover, then you either get interest or need to pay out interest depending on the rollover rates. Or if you bought a stock and got a dividend then write that in. Or if you shorted a stock and you had to pay a dividend, then write that in. Ending Balance – The ending balance of your account after the trade is closed after taking into account trade P&L, commission cost, and interest/swap. Reasons for taking the trade – Here is where you go into much more detail about why you placed the trade. Write out your thinking. Instead of writing a paragraph or two describing my thinking behind the trade, I condense the reasons down into bullet points. It can be anywhere from 1-10 bullet points. What I Learned – No matter if the trade is a win or loss, write down what you believed you learned. Again, instead of writing out a paragraph or two, I condense it down into bullet points. it can be anywhere from 1-10 bullet points. I do this during the day the trade closed as a profit or loss. What I learned after Long Term reflection, several days, weeks, or months – This is the very interesting column. This is important because after you have a winning or losing trade, you will not always know the true reasons why it happened. You have your immediate theories and reasons which you include in the previous column. However, there are times when after several days, weeks, or months, you find the true reason and proper market belief about why your trade succeeded or failed. It can take a few days or weeks or months to reach that “aha” moment. I am not saying that I am thinking about trades I placed ten months ago. I try to forget about them and focus on the present moment. However, there will be trades where you have these nagging questions about they failed or succeeded and you will only discover those reasons several days, weeks, or months later. When you discover the reasons, you write them in this column.
Tiền tệ trong thị trường ngoại hối cũng như các sản phẩm để chúng ta mua bán. Khi giao dịch trên thị trường forex, bạn thực hiện các lệnh buy hoặc sell trên một cặp tiền. Tỷ giá của mỗi cặp tiền tệ sẽ dao động theo đồng tiền tệ nào mạnh hơn tại thời điểm giao dịch. Các cặp tiền tệ được biểu thị bằng một loại tiền tệ này so với một loại tiền tệ khác. Chúng được ký hiệu là tiền tệ 1/tiền tệ 2. Ví dụ : Nếu bạn đang giao dịch đồng đô la Mỹ so với đồng đô la Canada, nó sẽ được ký hiệu là USD/CAD. USD/CAD là một trong những cặp tiền tệ chính trong thị trường forex. Nếu bạn đang giao dịch đồng bảng Anh với đồng Yên Nhật, nó sẽ được ký hiệu là GBP/JPY. Với mỗi cặp tiền, đồng tiền đầu tiên là hàng hóa và đồng tiền thứ hai đi sau là loại tiền để mua. Ví dụ trong cặp EUUSD, đồng tiền thứ nhất, đồng Euro là hàng hóa và đồng tiền thứ hai, USD là loại tiền để mua nó. Khi ta mua EUUSD, có nghĩa là ta bỏ tiền USD ra để sở hữu đồng Euro. Việc ta giao dịch với loại đồng tiền nào chẳng có gì khác biệt cả. Ta có thể giao dịch với USD, GBP, CAD hoặc bất kỳ đồng tiền nào khác. Khi ta muốn mua EUUSD, nhà môi giới sẽ chuyển đổi số dư tài khoản của ta sang USD rồi dùng số tiền USD đó để mua EUR. Cơ chế làm việc là như vậy. Bất kỳ việc mua bán nào trong thị trường forex đều được thực hiện qua trung gian đồng USD. Cũng chính vì đồng đô la Mỹ là đồng tiền chính nên việc mua bán tất cả các đồng tiền khác đều phải thông qua đồng USD.
2.Phân loại các cặp tiền tệ
2.1Cặp tiền tệ chính
Trong thị trường forex, cặp tiền tệ chính là tất cả các cặp chứa Đô la Mỹ (USD). Bởi vì đồng đô là Mỹ là đồng rất mạnh, nên cặp tiền tệ nào có đồng USD thì sẽ mặc định là cặp tiền tệ chính. Đây cũng là những cặp giao dịch thường xuyên nhất và có tính thanh khoản cao nhất trên thị trường forex. Cặp ngoại hối EUUSD được giao dịch nhiều nhất trong thị trường forex. Dưới đây là các cặp tiền tệ chính và các thuật ngữ mà các nhà giao dịch FOREX hay sử dụng. + EUUSD + GBP/USD + USD/JPY + USD/CAD + AUD/USD + USD/CHF + NZD/USD Chúng ta sẽ đi chi tiết từng cặp tiền ở bên dưới
2.2 Cặp tiền tệ chéo
Cặp tiền tệ chéo là các cặp ngoại tệ không chứa đồng đô la Mỹ USD. Dưới đây là các cặp tiền chéo của 3 loại tiền tệ lớn là Euro, Yên Nhật và Bảng Anh. + EUJPY + GBP/JPY + GBP/AUD + EUAUD + EUCAD + GBP/CAD …. Trong đó, cặp tiền thông dụng nhất đối với các nhà giao dich tiền tệ là GBP/JPY, EUJPY và cả GBP/USD. Riêng đối với cặp GBP/JPY là một trong những cặp tiền tệ được các trader thích mạo hiểm vô cùng ưa thích, vì biên động dao động lớn, dễ kiếm lợi nhuận. Và bởi vì lý do là nó biến động lớn và mạnh. Các tín hiệu mua bán của nó rõ ràng và mạnh mẽ, cũng như biên độ dao động lớn. Các nhà giao dịch tiền tệ mua bán GBP/JPY để thu lợi nhuận, nhưng con dao nào cũng có hai lưỡi. Việc thua lỗ cũng cao hơn nhiều.
3. Các cặp tiền tệ chính nào được giao dịch nhiều nhất
Trong số 7 cặp tiền chính, EUUSD là cặp tiền thông dụng nhất và có khối lượng giao dịch lớn nhất. Thực tế cho thấy có trên 70% các giao dịch trong thị trường forex tập trung vào cặp EUUSD. Nhưng điều đó không có nghĩa rằng có đến 70% người tham gia giao dịch cặp tiền này Các nhà giao dịch ngoại tệ cá nhân chỉ là một số lượng rất nhỏ của thị trường. Các giao dịch lớn được thực hiện do các Ngân hàng Trung ương và các liên ngân hàng. Chúng ta cùng đi chi tiết từng cặp tiền tệ chính: + EUUSD: đây là cặp tiền chiếm hơn 70% lượng giao dịch trên thế giới, cũng là cặp tiền phổ biến nhất trong giao dịch forex vì cặp tiền có sự biến động cao và giá cao. Trong sự Giao dịch, cặp tiền EUUSD có tiền tệ chính là EUR (Euro) và tiền tệ tham chiếu là USD (US Dollar). Biểu đồ tỷ giá của cặp ngoại hối EUUSD trong thị trường ngoại hối. + GBP/USD có tiền tệ chính là GBP (British Pound), tức tiền Bảng của nước Anh và tiền tệ tham chiếu là USD. + USD/JPY: có tiền tệ chính là USD (US Dollar) và tiền tệ tham chiếu là JPY (Japanese Yen) hoặc tiền yên của Nhật Bản. + USD/CHF có tiền tệ chính là USD Dollar Mỹ và tiền tệ tham chiếu là CHF (Swiss Franc) tiền tệ của nước Thủy Sĩ. + USD/CAD có tiền tệ chính là USD Dollar Mỹ và tiền tệ tham chiếu là CAD (Canadian Dollar) tiền tệ của nước Canada được gọi là Dollar Canada. + AUD/USD có tiền tệ chính là AUD (Australian Dollar) tiền tệ cua nước Úc và tiền tệ tham chiếu là USD Dollar Mỹ. + NZD/USD có tiền tệ chính là NZD (New Zealand Dollar) tiền tệ của nước New Zealand và tiền tệ tham chiếu là USD. Trên là 7 cặp tiền tệ chính được giao dịch phổ biến nhất trên thị trường ngoại hối, bạn thích giao dịch với các cặp tiền nào? Chắc chắn bạn cũng có danh sách những cặp tiền tệ ưa thích cho riêng mình. Chúc các bạn may mắn! Xem thêm: https://kienthucforex.com/cac-cap-tien-te-chinh-trong-thi-truong-forex/
1000pip Climber System Discount Code, Official Coupon Code
1000pip Climber System Discount Code, Coupon Code is now available. Click the link below to activate the official 1000pip Climber System coupon code now, enjoy! Here Is 1000pip Climber System Discount Code. Enjoy I’ve been using the system for a while now. So far, so good for me-I find I am making profits consistently. Losses do happen to me, although in my case, they have been few in number. I try to keep in mind that no system is 100% foolproof when it comes to trading, but I have won more than lost, so that’s a plus in my book. One thing I would advise new users about is that you have to be wary of United States news releases. Five out of six currency pairs are based on the US Dollar. Performance can be affected; I would get a news app for your phone or have the TV running the news in the background if you can. In case you are curious, the six currency pairs are the following: EUR to USD, AUD to USD, USD to CHF, USD to JPY, USD to CAD, and EUR to JPY. My bottom line is that it is a great system, very well built, and great for the price I paid. I would certainly recommend this to new Forex traders and veterans alike. I guess the only improvement I would hope for is that it can be made to work for other trade platforms, not just Metatrader. Click here to activate the official 1000pip Climber System Coupon Code, Enjoy
CMC Markets: is everything in CFDs? If so, how do the forward date ones work?
I just started a demo account with CMC Markets, and I was wondering if every single asset listed is traded as a CFD? When learning about forex from BabyPips I had the mentality as if I'm literally trading the currency; as in if it were in person, I'd be giving some coins in one currency and receiving another. I guess since CFDs are linear derivatives it doesn't matter as much, but I still feel like there are some additional considerations when trading CFDs vs "actual currency"? Also, what are the maturities on these? Are there even maturities? All the quotes just say "USD/CAD", "EUJPY" etc, but from my understanding of a CFD, you agree to pay the difference from actual and agreed, much like a future, so why are there no maturities? Question 2: For CFDs on things like equity indices, they seem to trade the whole day unlike their underlying. Does this mean say at 9pm EST the S&P500 CFD is just people essentially betting on tomorrow's open? And again with the futures thing, does after-market hours trading in these CFDs affect the real opening price the next day? (If markets are efficient and we assume there are people watching CFD prices like future prices, and then tomorrow's early trades become based on what the futures markets seem to say about the S&P, holding news and other things constant). Question 3: For CFDs with maturity dates like commodities on this platform, how does that work? Again, I'm mostly confused at how CFDs operate without maturities and how they different from futures. On the CMC markets platform, many agricultural commodities come with the suffixes like either "cash" or a maturity date, but currencies and equity indices do not. What does this mean? Those commodities I'm clicking trade on...am I trading a corn CFD? Or a CFD on corn futures? What exactly is the underlying mechanic? Question 4: yet another example. For the bond indices...what am I looking at on the platform? I just want to get a chart of US treasury yields but I don't think that is available on CMC. What am I looking at when I click UK Gilt Cash or US T-Bond Cash or US T-Bond Jun 2020? Tl;dr Don't understand the mechanics of CFDs and thus I'm not sure what EXACTLY I'm actually trading when I trade things like currency, equity indices, commodities. Surely I'm not actually trading a physical commodity or actual shares. Please note this is specific to CMC markets. Thanks :)
The analysis of the four-hour chart of the euro-currency currency pair, we are preparing a EUR/JPY forecast for tomorrow, which is also up-to-date at the moment. As a rule, the Forex forecast EUR/JPY for tomorrow is published after lunch taking into account the morning trading session and right before the most aggressive US trading session. EUR/JPY IG Client Sentiment: Our data shows traders are now net-long EUR/JPY for the first time since Aug 31, 2020 when EUR/JPY traded near 126.39. 2020-09-29 06:23:00 Real Time News According to the technical analysis of the pair: After indicating an improvement in Trump's health, the USD/JPY losses, then returned to move in the same path as it was during the week’s trading, stabilizing around 105.77, and the highest level during the past week was the 105.80 resistance, which confirms strongly that bulls are in urgent need of more stimulus to take the pair to stronger ... EUR/JPY is lacking a clear directional bias for the second day. Thursday’s high is now the level to beat for the bulls. On Thursday, EUR/JPY created a Doji candle at the resistance of the trendline falling from Sept. 1 and Sept. 10 highs. The pattern indicates indecision in the market place, and so does the two-way business seen so far today. EUR/JPY extends the rebound to the boundaries of 125.00. Further north comes in the early-September top near 126.50. EUR/JPY manages to gain extra pace and flirts with the 125.00 neighbourhood on Friday, clinching at the same time fresh 3-week highs and trading at shouting distance from the 200-week SMA near 125.20.. The cross needs to leave behind this zone on a convincing fashion and ...
EUR/JPY Technical Analysis for December 30 2015 by FXEmpire.com
http://www.fxempire.com/ - December 30 2015 currency daily technical analysis for the EUR/JPY pair. Find more information about Forex News (http://www.fxempi... In today’s session, we looked at a few USD and JPY pairs, but a lot of focus was on the Yen-plex as moves looks to be nearing. -Subscribe to DailyFX: https:/... -Clearly explained videos to help you build your forex trading strategy and market knowledge -Access to self-serve market information for traders to apply and enhance their own analysis http://www.fxempire.com/ - January 5 2016 currency daily technical analysis for the EUR/JPY pair. Find more information about Forex News (http://www.fxempire... Analyst: Sam [ wa.me/254722359298] Trade on ECN accounts: https://superforex.com/ecn-accounts Claim the Welcome+ bonus here: https://superforex.com/welcome-b...