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Archive for February 10th, 2007

Trading on Support and Resistance Levels

The concept of support and resistance is extremely interesting, and one which will help you considerably in the timing of your trading decisions. Yet it is a very simple concept to grasp. Support and resistance are basic tools used by traders to identify key reversal areas. As the names suggest support acts to keep the price above a certain level, whilst resistance acts to keep a share’s price below a certain level. Drawing support and resistance lines on charts, allows us not only to determine where these levels are, but also to consider future price movement in relation to them. Oh and don’t worry, all charting packages have the facility to draw lines on the screen.

Firstly, let me try to explain how and why these levels arise. Imagine a price is moving up and then subsequently starts moving down again. At the turning point there will be many buyers trapped who did not sell before prices moved down, and have decided to wait until the price moves back up again before selling ( they are living in hope ! ) Let us assume now that the price has stopped falling, and has started rising again. As it nears the point at which it turned the first time, those trapped buyers breath a sigh of relief and sell at breakeven or slightly less, which forces the price back down again as there is now more selling pressure than buying pressure. Naturally in the up move there has been buying, and these buyers now become trapped as prices move back down again. Now this can be repeated many times over, and you will see many different instruments including shares that behave in this way. In some cases this price action can last days, weeks or even months.

At the point where prices were falling and then started rising, exactly the same thing is occurring, but in reverse of course. We now have short sellers who are trapped at the bottom and have to wait for the price to come back down to them, who gratefully close their positions when this happens, to be replaced by more short sellers who are then trapped in turn….. – I think you get the picture.!!

When this price action happens, it has several consequences. Firstly it produces what we call a channel and the instrument is said to be channeling ( or range trading ). The prices form a defined channel with two lines that can be drawn, one above, and one below. Now the important part for us is not to practice our drawing skills, but these lines actually help us considerably. Once one of these lines is penetrated by prices, it becomes a line of support ( for prices going up ) and a line of resistance for prices going down.

Let’s imagine we have been watching a share for some months which has been trading within a channel. Suddenly we notice one day that it has broken above the line and prices are now moving up. The line that was originally resistance to higher prices has now become a line of support and we can trade with more confidence, knowing that if the prices are going to go back down again they will have to penetrate this line of support or floor if you like. If you imagine a building with two floors, prices have moved from the ground floor through to the first floor, and what was the ceiling, has now become the floor. In other words it has become a SUPPORT to higher prices and will take effort to penetrate if prices fall back. It gives us a little more comfort ( but not too much ) in now buying into the move.

Using the house analogy again, we can see what happens at the bottom of the channel. Suppose we notice one day that prices have gone through the ground floor and into the basement, what was the floor has now become the ceiling and has become RESISTANCE to prices going back up to ground floor level.

Now, one final point on support and resistance. This occurs when prices ‘gap up’ or ‘gap down’. This occurs when the opening price the following day, has opened at a different price from that which it closed at the night before. Now the reason I mention it in the context of support and resistance is simply this – if prices break out of a channel with a gap up ( going up ) or a gap down ( going down ) this adds weight to the move and weight to your decision to trade. The reason the gap has formed is because the market makers have opened prices with a significant gap ( up or down ) – they have done this for a reason. If it also coincides with a break out from a channel you can be reasonably sure that this confirms the move and therefore has more significance. Look out for them, they are worth the wait!!

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Posted on 10th February 2007
Under: Forex, Investing, Trading, Stock Market | No Comments »

Forex Trading Advice – Don’t take any forex advice until you Read This!

Would you take driving lessons from someone who had never driven in their lives?

Of course you wouldn’t!

With forex trading advice people take advice from people who have never traded and never question it, lose their money and are surprised.

If you are taking forex advice via signals or a system there is only one criteria you need to judge the advice on:

A real time track record.

That’s real money, made in the market over a 3 year period or longer.

It does not guarantee you will make money of course, but if I follow advice I like to know the forex trading advice I have taken, has made money and the logic is soundly based.

Forget hypothetical track records.

Anyone can make a profit if they know what the prices did!

Ever seen a hypothetical back tested system that didn’t?

My six year old boy could make a profit that way, but not sure I would trust him to trade for me!

I am a trader of 20 years and I see e-books and makings telling me I can easily make 90% accurate trades or 100 pips a day!

Please don’t insult my intelligence.

I know making money is not easy in anything and that includes forex trading.

Use common sense!

If forex trading advice looks to good to be true it probably is.

Use common sense and don’t get blinded by greed or an easy way to make money – you will lose.

Only take forex trading advice from vendors who provide the following:

A real time track record and the comfort of a money back guarantee.

There are plenty out there giving good solid advice that can help you make forex profits, but take a bit of time to seek them out.

Don’t fall for the scammers in forex trading advice offering you easy ways, or guaranteed profits. You will lose.

Only a small minority of traders make money and there not the above.

They will simply make money out of you from selling advice that will lose you money.

Accept this fact:

Forex markets can and do make money and there is good advice out there but forex trading makes few traders rich over night.

Forex trading is a long term solid way to make money and good profits.

Make sure you don’t fall for the hype of the huge amount of forex advice sellers on the net who have never traded in their lives.

No real track record you know what to do now

In conclusion with forex advice to separate the scammers from the people who make money, get the real time track record.

That’s it – Enough said.

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Posted on 10th February 2007
Under: Forex | No Comments »