Posts Tagged ‘Technical Indicators’


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Learn to Trade Forex Successful Using the 4 Types of Forex Trading Indicators

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

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If you are new to forex trading, do you know which types of technical indicators are for what kinds of usage? And if you are already an experienced forex trader, are you using the correct combinations of technical indicators to help you profit consistently in the forex market? If you are still not sure, we’ll discuss the following 4 different types of forex technical indicators below:

1. Trend Indicators – Also known as Directional Indicators. I have always reminded my students, ‘Trend is your best friend and always trade in the direction of a trend’. A forex trend may be quite subjective to different traders as they may have different views on trendiness. So those trend indicators out there in the forex market can help traders detect the starting and ending of a trend. Some of the more popular trend following indicators includes MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence), MA (Moving Average), Parabolic SAR. Depending just on trend indicators is not enough, you may need Momentum Indicator(s) to enter and/or exit a trade.

2. Momentum indicator – Also known as Strength Indicators. It is described as the speed of a move in price over a period of time. They are oscillators which are able to indicate whether the forex market is in the overbought or oversold regions. If they have risen to the overbought zone, there is high possibility that the price will be going down, and if they have fallen to oversold zone, there is high possibility price will be going up. Some of the more popular oscillating indicators in forex trading include Stochastic, Momentum, RSI (Relative Strength Index), CCI (Commodity Channel Index).

3. Volatility indicators – Also known as Bands Indicators. Often, a change in volatility will lead to a change in price. Therefore, we can see how active the forex market is just by looking at the price ranges. You may want to trade when there is a dramatic change in price movements, which suggests that the market is actively trading forex. Some of the more popular Volatility Indicator includes BB (Bollinger Bands), ATR (Average True Range), Envelopes.

4. Volume indicator – They are used to show the volume of forex trading and are useful to confirm the direction of a trend, a reversal or a breakout. Price movements increase when the volume increases, low volume may warn of a reversal in a forex trade. If a currency pair trades from a narrow range and then breaks out on high volume, this is a strong signal and may suggest a breakout. Some of the more widely used Volume Indicator includes Demand Index, Chaikin Money Flow, Money Flow Index, Ease Of Movement, OBV (On Balance Volume).

I’m sure that after the above discussions, you should have a better idea of the different types of forex technical indicators. While they can greatly help you in technical analysis and make trading decisions, I want to stress that NO forex indicators is holy grail. The indicators are just a confirmation of history and a guide for the future. Most importantly, you need to know the right combination of the forex technical indicators to get you profitable consistently in the long haul. You can find a forex trading system which has a very good combination of indicators in my forex ebook which I give for FREE. Good trading to all.

By: Daniel S.

About the Author:
To learn how to succeed in forex trading, download my 56-page Forex Trading To Riches ebook free at http://www.forextradingpower.com

The author, Daniel S, is the owner of http://www.ForexTradingPower.com where he provides premium forex tips and resources..



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Moving Average Crossovers

Saturday, January 9th, 2010


A moving average (MA) is one of the most basic technical indicators. It is an average of a predetermined number of prices such as the closing prices or opening prices calculated over a number of periods like 75 candles. The higher the number of candles in the average, the smoother the moving average line is. Moving averages are of two types:

1) Simple Moving Averages (SMAs)
2) Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs)

SMA is only a simple average. It is obtained by adding all the candles that you would like to measure. EMA is obtained by exponentially smoothing the SMA. The EMA responds more quickly to price changes as compared to SMA. EMA pays more attention to newer candles.

A moving average makes it easier to visualize price action without statistical noise. Instead of watching the up and down behavior of each candle, you are watching the relatively smooth moving average line.

Moving averages are lagging not leading indicators and its signal occurs after the new price movement not before it. Moving averages do not think ahead and they can only tell you what has happened, not what will happen.

Still, moving averages have a critical role to play in planning your trades in advance. Past does not always predict the future but it sure likes to repeat itself. Several different moving averages are used at once. They offer different pieces of the puzzle when planning our trades.

When the market is steadily rolling along, MAs keep us in our trades. Suppose something changes like the moving average crossover. Its time to get out or trade the new direction. MAs are frequently used as price filters.

The most obvious use of MAs is to watch for crossovers to confirm new trends. A short term MA has to cross a long term MA in order to filter choppier price action into a reliable indication for true price action.

Short term MAs are more sensitive to price action as they are measuring fewer candles. Longer term MAs are less sensitive to price action. Longer term MAs tend to be more flat and are less likely to whipsaw up and down.

If the fast EMA crosses below the slow EMA, it is predicting new downward price action. When MAs do cross over you should take notice at once. On the other hand, if the fast EMA crosses above the slow EMA, it is predicting a new upward price action.

MA crossovers often occur too late. If you use it as a trading signal, it will put you in the market with an unfavorable risk to reward ratio. Such moving average crossovers should not prompt you to jump into a trade at once.

A crossover should be part of the trade plan that you have developed in advance. Not every crossover is the same. Moving average crossovers are great as they are easy to see. It will immediately attract your attention but simply do not replace the work of planning your trades.

By: Ahmad A Hassam


About the Author:
Mr. Ahmad Hassam is a Harvard University Graduate. He is interested in day trading and swing trading stocks and currencies. Try Strignano’s Forex Signal Service free for two weeks. Discover a revolutionary Forex Robot Trading System!



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Technical Analysis – Reading FOREX Charts

Monday, November 23rd, 2009


Price charts can be simple line graphs, bar graphs or even candlestick graphs. These are graphs that show prices during specified time frames. These time frames can be anywhere from minutes to years or any time interval in between. Line charts are the easiest to read, they will show you the broad overview of price movement. They only show the closing price for the specified interval, they make it very easy to pick out patterns and trends but do not provide the fine detail of a bar or candlestick chart.

With a bar chart the length of a line displays the price spread during that time interval. The larger the bar is the greater the price difference between the high and low price during the interval. It is easy to tell at a glance if the price rose or fell because the left tab shows the opening price and the right tab the closing price. Then the bar will give you the price variation. When printed bar charts can be difficult to read but most software charts have a zoom function so you can easily read even closely spaced bars.

Originally developed in Japan for analyzing candlestick contracts candlestick charts are very useful for analyzing FOREX prices. Candlestick charts are very similar to bar charts they both show the high, the low, open and close price for the indicated time. However the color coding makes it much easier to read a candlestick chart, normally a green candlestick indicates a rising price and a red one indicates a falling price.

The actual candlestick shape in reference to the candlesticks around it will tell you a lot about the price movement and will greatly aid your analysis. Depending on the price spread various patterns will be formed by the candlesticks. Many of the shapes have some rather exotic names, but once you learn the patterns they are easy to pick out and analyze.

Price charts are not usually used by themselves to get the full affect you need to supplement them with some technical indicators. Technical indicators are normally grouped into some pretty broad categories. Some of the more common ones used to monitor and track the market movement are: trend indicators, strength indicators, volatility indicators, and cycle indicators.

Here is a list of some of the more commonly used indicators as well as a brief description.

Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) – This index will help indicate if the market is moving in a trend in either direction and how strong the trend is. If a trend has readings in excess of 25 then this is considered a stronger trend.

Moving Average Convergence/Divergence (MACD) – This shows the relationship between the moving averages which allows you to determine the momentum of the market. Any time that the signal line is crossed by the MACD it is considered to be a strong market.

Stochastic Oscillator – This compares the closing price to the price range over a specific time frame to determine the strength or weakness of the market. If a currency has a stochastic of greater than 80 it is considered overbought. However if the stochastic is under 20 then the currency is considered undersold.

Relative Strength Indicator (RSI) – This is a scale from 1 to 100 to compare the high and low prices over time. If the RSI rises above 70 it is considered overbought where as anything below 30 is considered oversold.

Moving Average – This is created by comparing the average price for a time period to the average price of other time periods.



By: Steve Welker

About the Author:
Ready to learn forex trading? Want to learn about FOREX Trading Signal.
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Forex Terminology For Beginners

Saturday, November 21st, 2009


Online Forex Glossary provided by Etoro.com

Ask (Offer) – the price of the offer, the price you buy for.

Bear - If someone has a negative view of a particular currency and believes that its price will decrease, they are said to be ‘bearish’ about that currency.

Bid (Demand) -the price of the demand, the price you sell for.

Bull - If someone has a positive view of a particular currency and believes that its price will increase, they are said to be ‘bullish’ about that currency.

ECB (The European Central Bank) – the main regulatory body of the European Union financial system.

Fed (The Federal Reserve) – the main regulatory body of the United States of America financial system, a division of which, the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee), regulates, among other things, federal interest rates.

Fundamental Analysis – a Forex analysis based only on news, economic indicators and global events.

GDP (Gross Domestic Product) – this is a measure of the national income and output for a given country’s economy. It is one of the most important Forex indicators.

Limit - A limit is placed on a trade so as to exit it after a speculator has gained the expected number of pips.

Long - Trading a currency under the assumption that its price will rise – a ‘buy’ trade..

Loss – the loss from closing long position at lower rate than opening or short position with higher rate than opening, or if the profit from a position closing was lower than broker commission on it.

Lot – definite amount of units or amount of money accepted for operations handling (usually it is a multiple of 100).

Momentum – the measure of the currency’s ability to move in any given direction.

Moving Average (MA) – one of the most basic technical indicators. It shows the average rate calculated over a series of time periods. Exponential Moving Average (EMA), Weighted Moving Average (WMA) etc. are just the ways of weighing the rates and the periods.

Open Position (Trade) – position on buying (long) or selling (short) for a currency pair.

Order – order for a broker to buy or sell the currency with a certain rate.

Pip - Means Price Interest Point and refers to the smallest digit in any pricing, so if GBPUSD rose from 1.9443 to 1.9450, it rose 7 pips.

Pivot Point – the primary support/resistance point calculated basing on the previous trend’s High, Low and Close prices.

Principal Value – the initial amount of money of the invested.

Profit (Gain) – positive amount of money gained for closing the position.



By: Dan Lares

About the Author:

Dan Lares is a Forex analysist at Etoro.com



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