Showing posts with label support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label support. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Ozzie and Guppy

You go, Ozzie! That’s what I feel like saying to this pair since it has broken out of its range yet again with a nice looking candle. But will it go? One encouraging sign is that it didn’t fall all the way back to the bottom of the consolidation range—it stopped well short of it which is bullish. The candles up since that point have been strong ones until the bearish piercing one that just completed. Note that it’s near the point where it fell back before some caution is warranted. It broke out overnight and in the early morning hours when I was sleeping so I didn’t take the trade on the breakout. What I’ll do now is see how it acts around this period before jumping in one way or the other. As I pointed out yesterday we’re still in an uptrend (since March) so the bias is to the long side. Here’s the three hour chart:

As far as the Guppy goes (GBP/JPY) it’s stuck in a small range as it tries to find its direction. In the chart below look at the beautiful symmetry of the moves and note that the second move up didn’t go as far as the length of the first one (I’ve marked the moves up with purple lines). I’m somewhat fanatical about proportion and symmetry because the market seems drawn to it as well. I’m still short in the pair (the tiny triangle marks where I took my short at 150.49). At this moment it’s at 135 pips profit. I still have my stop at a profit point of 80 pips at 149.69 and its high yesterday was 149.62 so that was a good stop. I may move it down a bit more since its high today so far has been 149.43. Whatever this pair now does, we know an important thing about it and that is that this narrow range of 148.06 (the low since I shorted it) to 150.49 is meaningful in some way. Otherwise it wouldn’t be hanging here. More to come. Note also how it rejects lower prices with long candle shadows in the past. It's not showing these here but that's not infallible. You have to combine things such as candles with support and resistance and other indicators before making decisions.


This is a frustrating week for me as a trader. Other committments keep demanding attention and I'm spending little time with the charts. But that's part of life and I'll be able to get back to it soon.

None of these are trade recommendations and trading involves substantial risk.

©Dianne L. Fecteau. No part of this can be excerpted without the author’s specific written permission.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Friday thoughts and the Guppy

After struggling a bit with the chart yesterday I decided to stay short the Guppy trade. Mostly the reason was that when I looked at it from different time frames and different perspectives, e.g. changing compression on the charts, I still believed in my reasons for getting into it. The pair managed to overcome its initial shock at touching 149.61 and has gone slumming as low as 148.62 this morning. It’s now over a 100 pips profit. Obviously, I’ve now moved my stop to lock in at least 50 pips. But will I close out? It is Friday, after all, and I often close all positions at the end of the week.

Take a look at the three hour chart now. It’s finding some support at the 148.60 level. There’s also some positive divergence with price and RSI. Of course, divergence is all over many charts right now. It may climb back up a bit. I think there’s more downward potential. But it doesn’t really matter what I think. At this point I need to pull back, look at what has happened this week to date, and make some decisions. In any case, it is what they so quaintly call a “free trade.” I can only make money on it now despite what happens.
To be honest the week has been a little frustrating. This is because of the sideways movements that largely took place in the pairs I traded. You can make some steady profits in this kind of market (and take small losses if you manage your stops). But let’s face it. The really big profits come from trending moves—being in at the right time and staying with it. And not taking small profits. For me this usually means that if I get a free trade going I stay with it if my analysis shows there could be more to come. That doesn’t mean I won’t take partial profits at a point. I did so this morning with the Guppy at 118 pips. That is how I quiet the savage and greedy beast within that shouts, bellows, and roars to take profits, any profits. Three pips? Five? Oh my, it starts to get excited. 15? 20? Now it positively palpitates with anticipation. At 50 it starts the heavy ammo—old messages from the past having to do with each and every one of my many, many failures in trading. When that fails to move me it jumps to parental assaults on my self esteem.

For a couple of years it won. I tried everything—reading, courses, various mind/body techniques. All helped to some degree but what finally did it for me was simple awareness of the feeling. Letting myself feel it and moving on. Without touching the keyboard. Sounds simple but it was devilishly difficult. I’ll write some more about it in an upcoming post this weekend.

Nothing I write here in this blog is a trade recommendation. Do not act on it as though it were. I hope to only share some of my own decision making process and some thoughts on the psychology and philosophy of trading. Especially when it’s so easy to fall into the me David without a sling shot, they Goliath mindset. Well maybe the me David, they Goliath is reality. But there is always a sling shot.

© Dianne Fecteau, 2009. No part of this material may be reproduced in any form, or referred to in any other publication, without the express written permission of the author.