Hidden Divergence Forex eBook

Filed Under (Forex eBook, Trading System) by ForexDigg on 01-08-2008

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Divergence, which is a term that technicians use when two or more averages or indices fail to show confirming trends, is one of the mainstays of technical analysis. Here’s a new way to use oscillators and divergence as well as methods to locate entry levels during a trend.

Most technical indicators mirror or confirm price movement. When price moves up, the indicator moves up; when price moves down, the indicator moves down. When prices peak, the indicator peaks; and when prices bottom, the indicator bottoms. Sometimes, however, a discrepancy occurs between price and indicator movement. That discrepancy is known as nonconfirmation and can be seen most clearly on overbought or oversold indicators as well as on indicators that move above or below a zero line.

Many traders only learn to recognize the type of nonconfirmation that occurs at market tops and bottoms, which is the classic divergence. But there are other forms of nonconfirmation I call hidden divergence (HD) that, when present, offer additional profit potential.
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Predicting Price Action

Filed Under (Forex eBook, Trading System) by ForexDigg on 01-08-2008

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Price action is the foundation of all technical indicators, yet most traders do little to understand it. Within trades, price action creates the most important element of context, defining inflection points that affect market entry and exit. The sophisticated investor understands price action and uses it to frame every trading decision.
ANALYSIS
• How likely is a price move continuation given varying conditions?
DATA
• See the probability of price move continuation in assorted tables.
ACTION
• Use breakouts to incorporate price action probabilities.
• Implement price action informed strategies in your trade exits.
RELATED MATERIAL
Test-drive FX Engines for free online at www.fxengines.com to see the power of system building, system testing, and system automation.
ABOUT THIS REPORT
The Forex Report is a periodic publication that investigates advanced strategies for superior trading performance in the foreign exchange markets. These reports utilize advanced statistical and econometric modeling techniques to create new insight into the trading strategy of the average trader. This Data Brief, Predicting Price Action, is intended for traders with moderate forex trading experience and technical analysis understanding.
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Bubble Trading eBook

Filed Under (Forex eBook, Trading System) by ForexDigg on 30-07-2008

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This is the last in the series of notes on GMMA applications. Bubble trading is a speculative activity. It calls for good trading skills and excellent trading discipline. The objective is to ride the momentum driven bubble for as long as possible. Exits are fine tuned using a variety of volatility based indicators and techniques. The end of day chart is used to set the general scene for the exit, but the actual exit is usually managed using intraday trading tools. Many traders avoid speculative bubble trading because it is so demanding. However, there are times when we enter a trade which shows a steady trend, only to find that a bubble develops. This poses several dangers and some temptations.

First the dangers. Bubbles inevitably burst. When they collapse prices often fall from a great height. In some cases this fall is fast enough and hard enough to seriously weaken the underlying trend. Bubble collapses can wipe out not only bubble profits, but also profits accumulated over many weeks or months. Recognizing these bubbles is a useful skill to develop because we can limit the damage from a bubble collapse.

If we have not set out to trade a bubble, then we may be tempted to take profits from the temporary bubble as it develops. This is a sound strategy, and can be used to protect profits or take opportunity profits, while still intending to remain with the underlying trend.

Many investors simply ignore the bubble, letting it collapse back to the trend. This may mean ignoring exit signals generated by other indicators. The bubble trade in this situation can attack our trading discipline. Traders need to be clear on when it is appropriate to ignore volatility based stop loss indicators in this situation.
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Forex eBook Tunnel Method

Filed Under (Forex eBook, Trading System) by ForexDigg on 30-07-2008

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For newbies to forex, or more conservative traders, you can scale back and cherry-pick the best trades. Simply use the model as your guide, and take the guesswork and emotion out of trading. You will always be buying dips in a bull run, and selling rallies in a bear run, to initiate new positions. You are letting the market tell you when it has had its little contra-trend rally/break. That, in essence, is what a MOMENTUM tunnel is all about. It creates a visual space for you to see these contra-trend opportunities as they are being created. When they turn, you can pounce on the trade, and now it’s time to continue the medium-term trend. You’re not going to hit every one perfect, but you will definitely get your share if you stay patient and wait for the optimum time. Even if you screw up the entry, the trend will probably make the trade a profitable one.

I hope you can see why trading MOMENTUM tunnels [4 hour] are better than trading PRICE tunnels [1 hour]. You will have less losing trades, and there is no chop around the MOMENTUM tunnel. If the market continues to go against the trend, within a very short period of time you will only have 2, possibly 3 losing trades before the weekly trend would change. This is a very acceptable tradeoff for the new information being given to you by the market: i.e. a weekly trend change. At least for us, this means closing old option positions [at just the right time], and creating new ones [at just the right time].

Remember the old trading proverb: price = information. That’s exactly what’s happening when you get a trend change from the weekly charts. Of course, remember that there is a lag of 1 week from knowing when the high or low reading comes, because you won’t know until Friday’s close if last week’s reading was the high/low or not.

Let me just add, that MOMENTUM tunnels should work particularly well with other financial markets. Stock indices, oil, and interest rates should trade very profitably with the new method. Some of the currency crosses [eur/jpy, eur/gbp, eur/chf, eur/cad], in theory, should also work well. Vegas Jr. is going to look at these particular crosses in a few weeks to check them out, so I’ll withhold my opinions on them until he is finished.
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Identifying Divergence In Technical Analysis

Filed Under (Technical Analysis, Trading System) by ForexDigg on 27-07-2008

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This is an article Todd prepared a few months ago on identifying divergence in technical analysis. I’m glad to share it here and hope that it is helpful.
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When looking for divergence between price and an indicator (e.g.,
MACD, Stochastic, CCI, RSI) what we are looking for first is for the price to match or exceed the previous pivot high or low. (Any time MACD is mentioned, other oscillators can be substituted.)

Rule #1: If we have not established through price action either a new price extreme (e.g., a peak that is higher than the previous high or a valley that is lower than the previous low) or a double top or bottom (matching the previous price but not exceeding it) then there is no divergence, period, end of story. Price MUST meet this requirement before indicators can even be examined for the possibility of divergence.

It is the easiest if we examine just successive pivot highs or lows and only two extremes at a time. The pair must include the peak or valley representing the current price action. In other words, when price sets a new high, proceeds to do its normal pullback from that high, and then moves again to meet or surpass the earlier high, this is the time to look for divergence. In downward motion, the price must set a new low, pull up from that low, and then move down to the earlier level or lower. Only in these conditions is the first prerequisite met. Failure to meet or exceed the previous extreme invalidates searching for divergence.

Rule #2: When price has fulfilled #1, then draw the line from the recent price extreme backward to the price level that had previously set the high or low — the one that current price action had to match or blow through to qualify for Rule #1. This only works on successive major peaks/valleys — any little bumps or hills that price action went through between setting the extreme points are irrelevant to the purpose of this discussion.

Rule #3: Unless price action actually creates successive peaks/valleys instead of simply consolidating along a ceiling or a floor, looking for divergence is ineffective.

At such times, any curves seen in MACD or similar indicators are simply an indication that momentum has slowed down. They are not an illustration of reliable divergence.

Until a new peak/valley is formed, price can only do one of two things: consolidate in a range or reverse and pull back away from that resistance/support, perhaps to try again later to establish a new extreme. Only in the second scenario does the search for divergence provide any credible indication of imminent reversal.

Rule #4: When qualified peaks are established, then we are connecting the TOPS of those two price peaks. If valleys are set, then we connect the BOTTOMS of those valleys. It’s an easy mistake to make to be drawing the “price-slope” line on the wrong side of the price action.

If we have established that price action has fulfilled these first requirements, then we can look at MACD and compare it to price.

Rule #5: Whether one’s MACD contains one or two lines, we are examining the extreme points of the CURVES of the MACD’s movement, not, in the case of MACD indicators with 2 lines, the relationship of one line to the other. This is another very common mistake.
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