New Release: Buy/Sell Trend Detector
Hi Traders,
Following the footsteps of our previous best seller, Super Math Scalper (which we have discontinued to ensure continued effectiveness on brokers' platform), we are excited to announce our latest release, Buy/Sell Trend Detector.
This is a MT4 signal indicator that generates trading signals just before the prices move up or down using blue and orange lines. An orange line will appear right before the price goes down so it is your signal to sell, and a blue line will appear right before the price goes up so this is your signal to buy.
To suit the risk profile of different traders, the indicator includes 4 unique trading styles that can change the speed and amount of signals:
Safe:
If you like to trade with a slow and careful pace, as many novices or newbies do, then this trading style if for you.
Medium:
As your confidence grows and your skill increases, you can pick up the pace of your trading with the medium style of trading mode.
Aggressive:
This mode is for the adrenaline fuelled pros who want a quick fire round of trading to earn serious money in short periods of time.
Custom:
This is perfect if you prefer to customize the settings to suit your unique style of trading that works for you. Different traders use different approaches and this gives you the freedom to trade 100% the way you like.
As with all of our previous indicators, Buy/Sell Trend Detector has a built-in automatic pop up sound, email and push notification alerts system that will inform you of every signal.
The indicator works on any currency pairs and should only be used on M15, M30, H1, H4 and D1.
Let me know how it goes for you guys. Happy trading!
Cheers,
Austin Winston
Using Pivots as Secondary Support & Resistance
Basically, there are three major forms of support and resistance which can be represented specifically by way of horizontal lines drawn from left to right, all of which serve the same basic functions. They include: Old Highs & Lows, Fibonacci retracements and extensions, and pivots.
While it may seem to be a minor technical detail, it may be worth knowing how pivots are actually calculated. Firstly, we input the High/Low/Close (HLC) numbers for the last completed trading session into the calculation of the Central Pivot (CP) value for the following session. Ideally, the calculation is automated, but such is not always the case. This is why it might be handy to know how to do the calculation yourself.
The formula for the Central Pivot is as follows:
As you can see from the formula above, the Central Pivot is in effect a simple average of these three parameters of the prior trading range. While you might find some variation among analysts (and charting packages) as to what constitutes a standard pivot set, my approach provides for four Resistance (or 'R') pivots, and four Support (or 'S') pivots, each sequentially numbered outwards from the Central Pivot (CP).
These S and R pivots are calculated with reference to the Central Pivot, as follows:
In addition to these major intervals, we can also plot both half and quarter pivots. A convenient method for labelling these levels is to simply add to the respective 'R' or 'S' pivot name, a suffix for '25' corresponding to the first quarter pivot beyond the major interval (again, in the outwards direction from the Central Pivot), '50' for the half pivot (or M level) and '75' for the third quarter pivot. Therefore, as illustrated below, the third quarter pivot up between RI and R2, for example, would be labelled R175; the third quarter pivot down between S1 and S2 would be labelled S175, and so on. This scheme is then repeated through all the remaining whole pivot levels in the set. Once you take a moment to get used to it, this labelling system makes it spontaneously obvious exactly where you are in the spectrum of pivot values from S4 to R4.
The calculation for quarter-pivot levels is straightforward: the half-pivot labelled 150 simply splits the difference between the adjacent whole pivot levels (e.g. Rl and R2); the smaller quarter pivots labelled 125 and 175 split the difference again between the half and two adjacent whole pivots. While the market is less likely to make a major turn on a quarter than on a whole pivot, these levels can be useful and should be watched within a potential confluence of events.
So now that we have figured out how to calculate pivots for different degrees of trend, and plotted them on our charts, what do we do with them? With all three varieties of horizontal support and resistance mentioned above, what we are most interested in is finding a confluence of events suggesting that price should either:
Example 1
In this chart, which plots Daily pivots on a H1 chart, let's say we have a valid reason to go long following a Swing Point Low completing a pullback in the uptrend. The open price for this trade was 1.6628. We see that the trade might have carried through to the next Daily session, as indicated by a second set of pivots painting in to the right. While the Daily Rl pivot (the lowest red line on the right-hand side of the chart) provided a minor take-profit objective, the next higher resistance level at R2 did a better job, in real time underscored by a still bullish confluence of oscillator readings higher up.
Realistically, it would have been prudent to trim a few pips off that target for the sake of safety (i.e. not missing a fill on the exit limit), but putting that issue aside for a moment, we can see price ran up precisely to the R2 pivot, before hitting resistance and commencing a relatively steep retracement. From the open price to the close on this level at 1.6752, the run up was worth 124 pips as a day trade. Holding the trade open beyond that level would have resulted in a disappointing drawdown of 116 pips as price fell almost all the way back down to entry, which would have triggered a stop loss if previously trailed to breakeven. This serves as an excellent example of why booking profit on anticipated support or resistance levels can be a useful tactic.
Example 2
In the above chart, which plots Weekly pivots on a H4 chart over a span of 10 weeks, we see a total of seven instances where retracements in the downtrend ended - sometimes literally to the pip - on either a whole- or half-pivot level. (As denoted by the green arrows underneath price action on this chart, there were also a few instances when a retracement started on a bounce off a support pivot; however, trading with the trend, we would have more likely used these as take-profit targets rather than opportunities to go long against the trend).
If we were poised throughout this downtrend to sell the rallies, these pivot resistance events would have provided an important part of the confluence of events desired to execute a trade to the short side (and bear in mind, this is only one pivot set; it would be interesting to see what kinds of resistance events were confirmed on the Daily and Monthly time frames as well).
With reference to the chart above, from the open of each candle following the confirmed pivot resistance, and carrying the trade open through to the lowest low on the right-hand side of the chart, this 10-week span offered the possibility of the following gross profit potential:
Example 3
Finally, in this chart, which plots Monthly pivots on the Daily chart over a period of roughly 13 months, we see from left to right that there had been a long uptrend covering a distance of at least 2,242 pips. The final leg of this larger move sub-divided perfectly into a smaller 5-wave impulse pattern, the fifth and final leg of which ended with a high degree of precision at the Monthly R3 pivot (solid red line). As is typical of major reversals, we can recognise a Swing Point High in the area of this resistance pivot, which was followed several weeks later by a so-called Death Cross of the Moving Average pair plotted in blue, which helped to confirm the new downtrend underway.
From this top reversal to the lowest low on the right-hand side of the chart, the resulting down move covered a distance of 1,469 pips. Whether viewed as an important take-profit target on the preceding long move, or a signal to position trade to the short side (or both), this high level pivot event correctly foretold a reversal of major importance.
While it may seem to be a minor technical detail, it may be worth knowing how pivots are actually calculated. Firstly, we input the High/Low/Close (HLC) numbers for the last completed trading session into the calculation of the Central Pivot (CP) value for the following session. Ideally, the calculation is automated, but such is not always the case. This is why it might be handy to know how to do the calculation yourself.
The formula for the Central Pivot is as follows:
Central Pivot (CP) = (High + Low + Close)/3
These S and R pivots are calculated with reference to the Central Pivot, as follows:
In addition to these major intervals, we can also plot both half and quarter pivots. A convenient method for labelling these levels is to simply add to the respective 'R' or 'S' pivot name, a suffix for '25' corresponding to the first quarter pivot beyond the major interval (again, in the outwards direction from the Central Pivot), '50' for the half pivot (or M level) and '75' for the third quarter pivot. Therefore, as illustrated below, the third quarter pivot up between RI and R2, for example, would be labelled R175; the third quarter pivot down between S1 and S2 would be labelled S175, and so on. This scheme is then repeated through all the remaining whole pivot levels in the set. Once you take a moment to get used to it, this labelling system makes it spontaneously obvious exactly where you are in the spectrum of pivot values from S4 to R4.
The calculation for quarter-pivot levels is straightforward: the half-pivot labelled 150 simply splits the difference between the adjacent whole pivot levels (e.g. Rl and R2); the smaller quarter pivots labelled 125 and 175 split the difference again between the half and two adjacent whole pivots. While the market is less likely to make a major turn on a quarter than on a whole pivot, these levels can be useful and should be watched within a potential confluence of events.
So now that we have figured out how to calculate pivots for different degrees of trend, and plotted them on our charts, what do we do with them? With all three varieties of horizontal support and resistance mentioned above, what we are most interested in is finding a confluence of events suggesting that price should either:
- Provide an interim take profit opportunity prior to a retracement of some kind; or
- Conclude the retracement (either at resistance in the downtrend, or support in the uptrend) and continue in the direction of the higher level trend; or
- Reverse outright at or near the horizontal line, changing higher level trend direction from down to up, or vice versa.
Example 1
In this chart, which plots Daily pivots on a H1 chart, let's say we have a valid reason to go long following a Swing Point Low completing a pullback in the uptrend. The open price for this trade was 1.6628. We see that the trade might have carried through to the next Daily session, as indicated by a second set of pivots painting in to the right. While the Daily Rl pivot (the lowest red line on the right-hand side of the chart) provided a minor take-profit objective, the next higher resistance level at R2 did a better job, in real time underscored by a still bullish confluence of oscillator readings higher up.
Realistically, it would have been prudent to trim a few pips off that target for the sake of safety (i.e. not missing a fill on the exit limit), but putting that issue aside for a moment, we can see price ran up precisely to the R2 pivot, before hitting resistance and commencing a relatively steep retracement. From the open price to the close on this level at 1.6752, the run up was worth 124 pips as a day trade. Holding the trade open beyond that level would have resulted in a disappointing drawdown of 116 pips as price fell almost all the way back down to entry, which would have triggered a stop loss if previously trailed to breakeven. This serves as an excellent example of why booking profit on anticipated support or resistance levels can be a useful tactic.
Example 2
In the above chart, which plots Weekly pivots on a H4 chart over a span of 10 weeks, we see a total of seven instances where retracements in the downtrend ended - sometimes literally to the pip - on either a whole- or half-pivot level. (As denoted by the green arrows underneath price action on this chart, there were also a few instances when a retracement started on a bounce off a support pivot; however, trading with the trend, we would have more likely used these as take-profit targets rather than opportunities to go long against the trend).
If we were poised throughout this downtrend to sell the rallies, these pivot resistance events would have provided an important part of the confluence of events desired to execute a trade to the short side (and bear in mind, this is only one pivot set; it would be interesting to see what kinds of resistance events were confirmed on the Daily and Monthly time frames as well).
With reference to the chart above, from the open of each candle following the confirmed pivot resistance, and carrying the trade open through to the lowest low on the right-hand side of the chart, this 10-week span offered the possibility of the following gross profit potential:
Example 3
Finally, in this chart, which plots Monthly pivots on the Daily chart over a period of roughly 13 months, we see from left to right that there had been a long uptrend covering a distance of at least 2,242 pips. The final leg of this larger move sub-divided perfectly into a smaller 5-wave impulse pattern, the fifth and final leg of which ended with a high degree of precision at the Monthly R3 pivot (solid red line). As is typical of major reversals, we can recognise a Swing Point High in the area of this resistance pivot, which was followed several weeks later by a so-called Death Cross of the Moving Average pair plotted in blue, which helped to confirm the new downtrend underway.
From this top reversal to the lowest low on the right-hand side of the chart, the resulting down move covered a distance of 1,469 pips. Whether viewed as an important take-profit target on the preceding long move, or a signal to position trade to the short side (or both), this high level pivot event correctly foretold a reversal of major importance.
Using Swing Points To Identify Price Reversals
We know that there is no such thing as a 'holy grail' in Forex trading. However, when it comes to Forex charting, there is something that comes really close, and that is Swing Points. In fact, Swing Points really are the trader's best friend as they are so much simpler to spot than complicated candlestick patterns with exotic sounding names, and more consistent in meaning when found at significant confluences of support or resistance. If you train your eyes to see these simple yet powerful chart structures and make them the central point of your analysis, you will be amazed at how much more accurate your trading calls will become. Guaranteed.
So, what exactly are Swing Points? A Swing Point (SP) High is an upside price extreme (ideally, but not necessarily represented by a price rejection wick) both preceded and followed by two lower highs on each side. This means that there needs to be at least five candles in the pattern. On the other hand, a SP Low can be defined as a downside price extreme (again, detected most easily by a price rejection wick) both preceded and followed by two higher lows on each side. The diagram below illustrates this concept.
The relationship of the two candles on either side of the price extreme to one another is not important, except that they have to be above a Low, or below a High. If they equal or exceed the extreme of the middle candle, then the pattern is considered not valid. An acceptable variation of this pattern is when the price extreme is found on two middle candles instead of one, resulting in a pattem consisting of six candles in total.
Now that we know how to identtify them, what is it about Swing Points that makes them so great? I can think of three things.
Firstly, Swing Points are a 'natural' indicator, i.e. they are found within price action itself, and they show you in real time when a potential change is underway. By contrast, technical indicators (at least lagging ones like Moving Averages and MACD), usually need a little time to catch up to the turn.
Secondly, Swing Points relate to the wave structure of price action in a very direct way. In other words, constituent waves of a larger pattern - whether an impulse or a retracement - very often mark both their beginning and end points, on a SP High and Low. Obviously, this can be very helpful in detecting turns in the market.
Thirdly, on a lower level chart (e.g. 15 minutes), Swing Points can provide an effective signal for both entering and exiting a trade with relatively limited risk; and often, right when the market is about to start moving in the direction favorable to the trade. Can you think of any technical indicators that can do all that?
Now, here's the challenge. While SP Highs & Lows do serve extremely useful purposes, they share something in common with conventional indicators (although occurring less often): the potential to yield 'fake' readings. Generally, this is more of the case on lower than on higher timeframes. On a Monthly chart, for example, well-formed SP Highs & Lows are far more likely to channel a turn into a major, many months' (or possibly years') long trend than on the 5 minute chart, where they can be overly abundant, sometimes reflecting mere noise. In other words, a 'fake' SP High or Low (as opposed to an invalid SP High or Low) is one that possesses all the characteristics indicated in the diagram above, but without accurately signifying a major price reversal.
Therefore, an important principle to remember is that we need a confluence of events to justify every single trading decision we make. This is because no matter how good the pattern, or the signal, or the measurement, none of them is so consistently reliable that we can safely use it by itself. So, while 'fake' Swing Point readings do occur, so too do 'fake' signals on trendline breaks, Fibonacci levels, Head & Shoulder patterns, oscillator divergences, or anything you can think of. But we don't give up on them because of it. Trading is only a probability, never a certainty. We should only respond to those trading oppotunities where the weight of evidence puts the balance of probabilities in favor of the market moving decisively in one direction or the other. Thus, we'll always look to confirm a SP High or Low with other things.
1. Start and End of Wave Structure
The following chart shows a market top clearly marked to the left. As we can see, the trend turned down thereafter with lower lows and lower highs, and a clear contrast between those linear looking legs down in line with trend, interrupted briefly by overlapping or flat periods of consolidation or retracement. Within this procession, we can see both SP Highs (marked by red arrows, usually signaling an opportunity to sell the rallies in the downtrend) and SP Lows (marked by green arrows, usually signaling near-term excesses of selling pressure).
While there are other Swing Point formations on this chart which are not marked, we nonetheless see that every single significant wave within the larger formation did start and end with a valid Swing Point. For instance, the third small corrective wave up from the left hand side of the chart (labeled 6) marks the end of a pullback to very near the 38% Fibonacci retracement level of the preceding leg down. That SP High marked both the end of a corrective leg and the start of the continuation down in line with trend.
Selling that rally at 1.4414 and holding it through to the start of the next major corrective pullback at 1.4029 (labeled 11 on the chart) represented an opportunity of 385 pips. You may want to look closely at all the marked portions of this chart example to see how Swing Points confirmed similar reversals, whether with or against the trend.
2. Well-timed Entry Signals with Limited Risk
When we have carefully analyzed all our charts from the higher to lower time frames and concluded that a high-probability setup is unfolding, that's where we can drill down to successively lower timeframes to look for a SP High or Low to trigger into the trade. You may have indicator signals you already like to work with for that purpose - such as a fast Moving Average crossover or a Parabolic SAR reversal - and that's fine. But what a Swing Point entry can do for you is both confirm the indicator signal and get you in, right when the market is turning. Again, it often takes an indicator a few bars to catch up with the Swing Point, so with this method you might actually enjoy a faster entry which can both reduce the size of your stop and increase your profit levels.
As a simple entry trigger, it is on the open of the first candle after the five candles comprising the SP pattern when a market order can be executed. In other words, all five candles in the pattern must have closed before action can be taken. Don't be too excited to jump into the trade that you don't wait for that last candle to close. A SP pattern wouldn't be based on five candle closes if it wasn't for a good reason. Trust the setup and wait patiently for it - it works.
The two charts below show a H4 chart followed by a concurrent M15 chart. On the higher time frame chart, we see a very large-scale corrective pullback against the uptrend, down to the Monthly Central Pivot (the horizontal black dashed line) - a potentially powerful support area. Price eventually pulled up from that area (circled, with green arrow marker), forming a higher degree SP Low. At the exact same point that price was nearing that support, a SP Low was confirmed on the M15 chart (again, on the close of the two following candles with higher lows). As can be seen from this example, once price started to move in the opposite direction, there was virtually no drawdown whatsoever: a very clean entry point with limited risk. Though this is admittedly something of a 'cherry-picked' example, it is fairly representative of price action in conjunction with quality Swing Points that we're always on the lookout for.
The above example demonstrates a bit of a dilemma we face, though, looking for Swing Points on different timeframes concurrently. If we want to act on the signal on the M15 chart, how do we know it will be confirmed by a later Swing Point on the H4 chart? If we wait for it on the H4 chart, won't the market have moved off the Swing Point on the M15 chart? In the live edge of trading, we can't know the answers to those questions definitively. The point is, when we execute on a low level timeframe, we are forced to act on incomplete information (the as-yet unconfirmed Swing Point on the higher timeframe, for example). That's where a confluence of events becomes so important - we need lots of evidence of support on several timeframes when we go long, and similarly, we need lots of evidence of resistance on several timeframes when we go short. That's the insurance we need to act on the low-level Swing Point.
3. Well-timed Exit Signals for Maximum Profit
Finally, the chart below looks at the closing side of the trade from the two charts above. Entering long where we did, and with a well-informed outlook that had the market rising in a larger 5-wave impulse pattern, a logical place to take profit would have been on or near a retest of the Old High resistance area (from the H4 chart), here marked' A'. You could have simply set an Exit Limit for a few pips shy of that Old High and left well enough alone. But let's say, you initially decided against that strategy. Then later, watching the live edge of the market as price approached that resistance level, maybe you changed your mind; perhaps the momentum of the move was starting to look questionable, so you decided it was a good place to take profit after all.
In this case, the SP High ending a leg up on a lower timeframe in close proximity to a documented resistance area would provide an excellent place to cover the long, just before price started a pullback, or possibly an outright reversal. In this example (a M30 chart), from the entry point on the third candle after the SP Low, to the exit on the open of the third candle after the SP High near the old resistance level, the total size of the run (excluding spread) was: (1.6970-1.6745) = +225 pips. This example has shown how Swing Points are realistically used in actua1 trading situations, as the logic of the profit target selected was quite typical.
If you are not familiar with Swing Points, the best thing to do is to simply practice, practice, and practice! A useful assignment might be to print off a single hard copy of each of the charts you work with for any Forex pair you like to trade (Monthly on down to M15), and simply circle every single SP High and Low you see, as per the guidelines specified above. Then ask yourself: Where did price go after each Swing Point? What was it about the Swing Points where sharp reversals happened that made them different from less effective Swing Points?
Were there other things going on in the chart at the same time? As you research these issues yourself, in particular by applying some of the other tools of technical analysis, hopefully you'll start to develop a sense for which Swing Points are meaningful, and why are not.
So, what exactly are Swing Points? A Swing Point (SP) High is an upside price extreme (ideally, but not necessarily represented by a price rejection wick) both preceded and followed by two lower highs on each side. This means that there needs to be at least five candles in the pattern. On the other hand, a SP Low can be defined as a downside price extreme (again, detected most easily by a price rejection wick) both preceded and followed by two higher lows on each side. The diagram below illustrates this concept.
The relationship of the two candles on either side of the price extreme to one another is not important, except that they have to be above a Low, or below a High. If they equal or exceed the extreme of the middle candle, then the pattern is considered not valid. An acceptable variation of this pattern is when the price extreme is found on two middle candles instead of one, resulting in a pattem consisting of six candles in total.
Now that we know how to identtify them, what is it about Swing Points that makes them so great? I can think of three things.
Firstly, Swing Points are a 'natural' indicator, i.e. they are found within price action itself, and they show you in real time when a potential change is underway. By contrast, technical indicators (at least lagging ones like Moving Averages and MACD), usually need a little time to catch up to the turn.
Secondly, Swing Points relate to the wave structure of price action in a very direct way. In other words, constituent waves of a larger pattern - whether an impulse or a retracement - very often mark both their beginning and end points, on a SP High and Low. Obviously, this can be very helpful in detecting turns in the market.
Thirdly, on a lower level chart (e.g. 15 minutes), Swing Points can provide an effective signal for both entering and exiting a trade with relatively limited risk; and often, right when the market is about to start moving in the direction favorable to the trade. Can you think of any technical indicators that can do all that?
Now, here's the challenge. While SP Highs & Lows do serve extremely useful purposes, they share something in common with conventional indicators (although occurring less often): the potential to yield 'fake' readings. Generally, this is more of the case on lower than on higher timeframes. On a Monthly chart, for example, well-formed SP Highs & Lows are far more likely to channel a turn into a major, many months' (or possibly years') long trend than on the 5 minute chart, where they can be overly abundant, sometimes reflecting mere noise. In other words, a 'fake' SP High or Low (as opposed to an invalid SP High or Low) is one that possesses all the characteristics indicated in the diagram above, but without accurately signifying a major price reversal.
Therefore, an important principle to remember is that we need a confluence of events to justify every single trading decision we make. This is because no matter how good the pattern, or the signal, or the measurement, none of them is so consistently reliable that we can safely use it by itself. So, while 'fake' Swing Point readings do occur, so too do 'fake' signals on trendline breaks, Fibonacci levels, Head & Shoulder patterns, oscillator divergences, or anything you can think of. But we don't give up on them because of it. Trading is only a probability, never a certainty. We should only respond to those trading oppotunities where the weight of evidence puts the balance of probabilities in favor of the market moving decisively in one direction or the other. Thus, we'll always look to confirm a SP High or Low with other things.
1. Start and End of Wave Structure
The following chart shows a market top clearly marked to the left. As we can see, the trend turned down thereafter with lower lows and lower highs, and a clear contrast between those linear looking legs down in line with trend, interrupted briefly by overlapping or flat periods of consolidation or retracement. Within this procession, we can see both SP Highs (marked by red arrows, usually signaling an opportunity to sell the rallies in the downtrend) and SP Lows (marked by green arrows, usually signaling near-term excesses of selling pressure).
While there are other Swing Point formations on this chart which are not marked, we nonetheless see that every single significant wave within the larger formation did start and end with a valid Swing Point. For instance, the third small corrective wave up from the left hand side of the chart (labeled 6) marks the end of a pullback to very near the 38% Fibonacci retracement level of the preceding leg down. That SP High marked both the end of a corrective leg and the start of the continuation down in line with trend.
Selling that rally at 1.4414 and holding it through to the start of the next major corrective pullback at 1.4029 (labeled 11 on the chart) represented an opportunity of 385 pips. You may want to look closely at all the marked portions of this chart example to see how Swing Points confirmed similar reversals, whether with or against the trend.
2. Well-timed Entry Signals with Limited Risk
When we have carefully analyzed all our charts from the higher to lower time frames and concluded that a high-probability setup is unfolding, that's where we can drill down to successively lower timeframes to look for a SP High or Low to trigger into the trade. You may have indicator signals you already like to work with for that purpose - such as a fast Moving Average crossover or a Parabolic SAR reversal - and that's fine. But what a Swing Point entry can do for you is both confirm the indicator signal and get you in, right when the market is turning. Again, it often takes an indicator a few bars to catch up with the Swing Point, so with this method you might actually enjoy a faster entry which can both reduce the size of your stop and increase your profit levels.
As a simple entry trigger, it is on the open of the first candle after the five candles comprising the SP pattern when a market order can be executed. In other words, all five candles in the pattern must have closed before action can be taken. Don't be too excited to jump into the trade that you don't wait for that last candle to close. A SP pattern wouldn't be based on five candle closes if it wasn't for a good reason. Trust the setup and wait patiently for it - it works.
The two charts below show a H4 chart followed by a concurrent M15 chart. On the higher time frame chart, we see a very large-scale corrective pullback against the uptrend, down to the Monthly Central Pivot (the horizontal black dashed line) - a potentially powerful support area. Price eventually pulled up from that area (circled, with green arrow marker), forming a higher degree SP Low. At the exact same point that price was nearing that support, a SP Low was confirmed on the M15 chart (again, on the close of the two following candles with higher lows). As can be seen from this example, once price started to move in the opposite direction, there was virtually no drawdown whatsoever: a very clean entry point with limited risk. Though this is admittedly something of a 'cherry-picked' example, it is fairly representative of price action in conjunction with quality Swing Points that we're always on the lookout for.
The above example demonstrates a bit of a dilemma we face, though, looking for Swing Points on different timeframes concurrently. If we want to act on the signal on the M15 chart, how do we know it will be confirmed by a later Swing Point on the H4 chart? If we wait for it on the H4 chart, won't the market have moved off the Swing Point on the M15 chart? In the live edge of trading, we can't know the answers to those questions definitively. The point is, when we execute on a low level timeframe, we are forced to act on incomplete information (the as-yet unconfirmed Swing Point on the higher timeframe, for example). That's where a confluence of events becomes so important - we need lots of evidence of support on several timeframes when we go long, and similarly, we need lots of evidence of resistance on several timeframes when we go short. That's the insurance we need to act on the low-level Swing Point.
3. Well-timed Exit Signals for Maximum Profit
Finally, the chart below looks at the closing side of the trade from the two charts above. Entering long where we did, and with a well-informed outlook that had the market rising in a larger 5-wave impulse pattern, a logical place to take profit would have been on or near a retest of the Old High resistance area (from the H4 chart), here marked' A'. You could have simply set an Exit Limit for a few pips shy of that Old High and left well enough alone. But let's say, you initially decided against that strategy. Then later, watching the live edge of the market as price approached that resistance level, maybe you changed your mind; perhaps the momentum of the move was starting to look questionable, so you decided it was a good place to take profit after all.
In this case, the SP High ending a leg up on a lower timeframe in close proximity to a documented resistance area would provide an excellent place to cover the long, just before price started a pullback, or possibly an outright reversal. In this example (a M30 chart), from the entry point on the third candle after the SP Low, to the exit on the open of the third candle after the SP High near the old resistance level, the total size of the run (excluding spread) was: (1.6970-1.6745) = +225 pips. This example has shown how Swing Points are realistically used in actua1 trading situations, as the logic of the profit target selected was quite typical.
If you are not familiar with Swing Points, the best thing to do is to simply practice, practice, and practice! A useful assignment might be to print off a single hard copy of each of the charts you work with for any Forex pair you like to trade (Monthly on down to M15), and simply circle every single SP High and Low you see, as per the guidelines specified above. Then ask yourself: Where did price go after each Swing Point? What was it about the Swing Points where sharp reversals happened that made them different from less effective Swing Points?
Were there other things going on in the chart at the same time? As you research these issues yourself, in particular by applying some of the other tools of technical analysis, hopefully you'll start to develop a sense for which Swing Points are meaningful, and why are not.
Introducing New Forex Scalper: Super Math Scalper (Sold Out)
Hi guys,
We have recently released a new Forex signal indicator, Super Math Scalper.
It is a unique mathematical scalping indicator that uses mathematical trading formula to predict where the price will go and generate super fast and profitable signals right when the price starts moving.
The signals NEVER repaint!
Being a scalper, note that it works only on M1 and M5. It is designed to work for all currency pairs, but the best results can be expected on GBP/JPY, EUR/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, NZD/USD and NZD/JPY.
As usual, it has a built-in automatic pop up sound, email and push notification alerts system that will inform you of every signal.
Another great feature of this scalper is a special informer system that shows trend strength, time left until next candle, last generated signal, etc. Very very useful!
Super Math Scalper is designed for MT4 platforms. It is NOT an EA nor a Robot, but a powerful buy/sell signals scalping indicator. It generates smart signals for you, you follow them and make profit.
Try it out and let me know how it goes.
Happy trading!
Cheers,
Austin Winston
We have recently released a new Forex signal indicator, Super Math Scalper.
It is a unique mathematical scalping indicator that uses mathematical trading formula to predict where the price will go and generate super fast and profitable signals right when the price starts moving.
The signals NEVER repaint!
Being a scalper, note that it works only on M1 and M5. It is designed to work for all currency pairs, but the best results can be expected on GBP/JPY, EUR/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, NZD/USD and NZD/JPY.
As usual, it has a built-in automatic pop up sound, email and push notification alerts system that will inform you of every signal.
Another great feature of this scalper is a special informer system that shows trend strength, time left until next candle, last generated signal, etc. Very very useful!
Super Math Scalper is designed for MT4 platforms. It is NOT an EA nor a Robot, but a powerful buy/sell signals scalping indicator. It generates smart signals for you, you follow them and make profit.
Try it out and let me know how it goes.
Happy trading!
Cheers,
Austin Winston
FREE INDICATOR: MARKETWAY
Hi Traders,
I have an indicator for you called "MarketWay"
I have an indicator for you called "MarketWay"
It looks very complicated when you attach it to your chart, but we only need to look at the lime dots and white line.
When lime dots are above white line - buy
When lime dots are below white line - sell
It works on all pairs and timeframes, however I recommend that you use it on H1 or higher.
If you wish to change the amount/speed of the signals, just go to indicator inputs and experiment with different values.
Hope you are having a great summer!
P.S. Also check out my other free indicators on the right hand side of this blog
Cheers,
Introducing Forex Income Boss
Hi guys, how's everyone's trading results lately?
I'm glad to introduce a new Forex trading system by my good friend, Russ Horn, that is suited for new to intermediate traders.
With the trading strategies taught in this system, there is no need to spend extensive hours watching the market, which is perfect for part-time traders with a full-time job. In my opinion, anyone can trade this system in just a couple hours per day, and there's a few ways you can do it.
However, please note that the method in this system can only be traded using the MT4 platform. If you are a new trader or you have not used this platform before, there is an entire DVD to show you exactly how to use it. The MT4 trading software is very easy to use, which is why it is the preferred platform of many traders.
Using this system, you can trade whenever you see a signal, no matter the time except in instances mentioned in the manual like when there are some high impact news events imminent or a trading session is opening.
Forex Income Boss will work well on any currency pair, so if you have a few favorites, go ahead and trade them. However, if you do choose to trade lower timeframes like the 5 minute or even 1 minute, you will want to keep your trades limited to the pairs with lower spreads, otherwise, spreads could eat your profits.
The system includes both trend following and reversal entry types. Of course, trading with the trend is definitely the most profitable way to trade especially for new traders and I would really recommend starting with that first. The methods include scalping, intraday, and swing trading. In other words, it can absolutely be used to scalp the 5 minute and even the 1 minute timeframes, but you can also use it very effectively on the 4 hour, daily or weekly timeframes. The best thing of all is the system works on every timeframe.
The techniques in Forex Income Boss are relatively easy to follow, which is why I can recommend it for new traders. Aside from the numerous examples and live trades to show you how to apply them, there is the Members' Area to answer any questions and help you understand how to trade the system better, as well as regular webinars especially to help new traders.
Personally, I achieve a winning rate of approximately 60% using the system.
Forex Income Boss, which includes the 6 DVDs, a trading manual, cheat sheets, Members' Area, webinars and all the bonuses, are all for a one-time only fee of $997. Don't worry if the system doesn't suit you as there is a 60 Days Money Back Guarantee. You will also have unlimited access to the private members only area for 6 months.
For serious traders, I highly recommend this course.
For more information, check out the official website below.
Happy trading all!
Cheers,
Austin
Introducing New MT4 Indicator: Forex Profit Master
Hi Traders,
Check out this new MT4 indicator which is designed to work on M15, M30, H1 and H4, and on all currency pairs.
I am super excited with the results! The signals are extremely accurate and the profit is simply fantastic. You could win almost every trade if you follow a couple of simple rules explained in the user guide.
Introducing Buy/Sell Arrow Scalper
Hi Traders,
There's a new scalping tool that you may want to consider.
It works only on M1 and M5 for all currency pairs, but the best results can be expected on USD/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CAD and EUR/JPY.
Automatic pop up sound and email alerts system that will inform you of every signal generated by this indicator tool.
Together with special informer system that shows trend strength, time left until next candle, last generated signal etc. your trading will be very easy and profitable!
Buy/Sell Arrow Scalper is designed for MT4 platforms. It is NOT an EA or Robot, but a powerful buy/sell signal arrows scalping indicator software. You get smart signals, use them and make profits.
Check it out now with some screenshots of it in action.
Let me know how it goes for you.
Happy trading!!!
Update:
A lot of you got very excited after seeing yesterday's GBP/USD M1 screenshot with 6/6 Winning trades
Now, I would like to show you bigger and faster profits that I've just made with this indicator on the GBP/JPY M1
100+ Pips in 3 quick trades!
There's a new scalping tool that you may want to consider.
It works only on M1 and M5 for all currency pairs, but the best results can be expected on USD/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CAD and EUR/JPY.
Automatic pop up sound and email alerts system that will inform you of every signal generated by this indicator tool.
Together with special informer system that shows trend strength, time left until next candle, last generated signal etc. your trading will be very easy and profitable!
Buy/Sell Arrow Scalper is designed for MT4 platforms. It is NOT an EA or Robot, but a powerful buy/sell signal arrows scalping indicator software. You get smart signals, use them and make profits.
Check it out now with some screenshots of it in action.
Let me know how it goes for you.
Happy trading!!!
Update:
A lot of you got very excited after seeing yesterday's GBP/USD M1 screenshot with 6/6 Winning trades
Now, I would like to show you bigger and faster profits that I've just made with this indicator on the GBP/JPY M1
100+ Pips in 3 quick trades!
Remember that the lower the timeframe, the harder it is to predict the price movement. So, it's very important that you use a smart reliable indicator which does not simply guess, but ACTUALLY KNOWS where the price will go in the next second.