Showing posts with label point and figure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label point and figure. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

GBPUSD

GBPUSD
So after yesterday’s successful trade, how will I approach GBPUSD today?

Equity futures were bidding up early and now that the US equity markets have opened, the Dow and S&P are slightly up. This usually does not bode well for the oft-maligned USD. Looking at my three-hour point and figure chart (P&F), I see that there is still a bit of room for GBPUSD to rise if it ranges within the area I’ve highlighted. I’ve pasted a picture of that chart below the candle one. The pair is in a downtrend on the shorter time frames. The three-hour candle chart has interesting features. First, the pair didn’t quite achieve a minor resistance level. It could rise to the blue lines that I’ve marked as a strong resistance zone but it hasn’t happened yet. Second, the candles have upper shadows. These are more apparent on a one-hour chart (not shown). Third, it has broken a steep, short-term uptrend line. This is not a big deal because it could be dropping down a bit to catch its breath before it pushes up. But it isn’t showing great strength as represented by RSI or candle size. The candles aren’t tall like the first one that pushed off yesterday’s morning’s bottom. Finally, it could be forming a Gartley pattern that, if it develops, will be bearish. I sold which is marked by the little triangle. I’ve already moved my stop to break even. We’ll have to see what unfolds. In any case, here are both the three-hour candle chart and the three-hour P&F chart:
© 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.

My purpose in writing this blog is to show you how one trader, me, makes trading decisions and survives while trading Forex. One of the biggest problems I had when I first started trading was trying to apply the “rules” to actual trades. Another was the psychology—limiting losses and letting profits run. If you study my blog you’ll see how I deal with both those issues. So my writings are not trade recommendations but rather educational in purpose. You have to decide on your own approach to trading. Remember that trading is risky.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Monday morning in the Ozzie

Last week I wrote that I shorted the AUD/USD at .8738. I’m still short. After hitting a low this morning of .8587 it’s back up a bit. Currently I’m at 94 pips profit as I write this. I’ve moved my stop to keep 20 of those pips. I may move it closer depending on how the pair behaves in the next hour or so. It’s well back into the consolidation range I wrote about extensively in the past couple of weeks. 45°

Here’s my one-hour, three box point and figure (P&F) chart. Notice the simple triple top it broke on its ascent. It could head back to that level before it resumes its climb. That would make a nice profit target of .8480 to .8520. What’s important to remember is that the pair remains technically in an overall uptrend that began in March. If the pair violates the trend lines I’ll be happier being short in this pair (actually very happy). But until that happens, I’m thinking reaction in an uptrend. That doesn’t mean you can’t make money from going counter to the trend. It does mean you have to be alert and not get all gaga over the trade. Now that I think about it, never get all gaga over a trade.

As always, this isn't a trading recommendation in any way. Trading Forex, or anything I guess, involves substantial risk and is not for the faint of heart.

© 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.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Waiting it out

AUD/USD
Can the market move any slower? Well, yes, I guess it could. My long that I entered yesterday at .8570 has gone up as much as 70 pips but has now fallen back.

I closed half my position at 50 pips and have moved my stop to breakeven. It’s either going to make it up to the top of the range or it won’t. It’s like watching paint dry. But little has changed since my analysis so there’s no reason to do anything else but wait. This situation won’t last forever.

EURUSD

I was stopped out yesterday on the brief move to 1.4653. After looking at the price action on the 15 minute chart I decided to short again. I entered at 1.4632. What made me do so? Remember, I had lightened up on my short position yesterday because of overall bullish sentiment, a slight expansion on the hourly chart, and the fact of triple witching this week which traditionally has resulted in a positive week for the Euro.

Look at the candles on the 15 minute chart below. The upper shadows were long, suggesting that the higher price was being rejected. A gravestone doji formed. This was bearish. The price had rallied, yes, but was dragged down to the low of the 15 minute session. Steve Nison wrote in his book that “the gravestone doji represents the gravestone of the bulls that have died defending their territory.” (Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2001). There was also divergence between price and RSI. The small triangle represents my entry.

As with the Ozzie, price will not stay in this narrow range forever. Yesterday afternoon I plotted out my interpretation of the Elliott waves on a daily Euro chart which is below. I don’t consider Elliott Wave Theory (EWT) tradable in and of itself but I do believe one can gain insight into the market by looking at it from this viewpoint. The problem of course is that if you have five EWT analysts in a room you usually have six interpretations. One reason this is true is because of the nature of corrections—it’s often hard to see them until well after the fact.


My interpretation is that we’re in a correction known as a zigzag. This is a three wave correction (ABC). EWT involves rules (which are inviolate) and guidelines. The rules for a zigzag are simple and are found in Frost and Prechter’s book, Elliott Wave Principle. First, it always subdivides into 3 waves. I think wave C is forming now, making it the third wave. Second, wave B always subdivides into a ZZ, flat, triangle, or combination thereof. That’s pretty broad, guys, but what I’m labeling B conforms to this. Third, wave B never moves beyond start of wave A which it did not. Finally, wave C always subdivides into an impulse or diagonal. An impulse is five waves up which I’ve labeled with 1 being in March of this year at 1.3740. So, by this interpretation, we’re in the fifth wave up.

Now the question is where might it end? Ha! That’s always the question.

The guidelines for zigzags say wave C is often about the same length as A and usually ends beyond end of wave A. If this is true then we could expect it to end above 1.4720 which is where wave A ended in December of last year. Another guideline says that a line connecting waves A and C is often parallel to a line connecting the end of wave B and the start of wave A. If that’s true then again we’re looking at about 1.4720.
I could buy all this but I think even if it’s true that there is some serious sideways action going on in the Euro (in most pairs actually) and one can make a few pips while it works itself out.

Frost and Prechter also write about the Golden Section. The golden section has to do with how you divide a total length of something. It’s applied to wave theory in that the distance between the start of wave 1 and the bottom of wave 4 will be either .618 or .382 of the whole. You can decide which one by observing how wave five behaves. You need to know whether wave 5 “extends” or not. This is where EWT makes me grind my teeth and clench my jaw. If I have to wait until the end of wave 5 the first question is how will I know it has ended? But never mind that.

I’m going to make an assumption both ways and see what it gets me. If I decide that the distance from the bottom of wave 1 at 1.2456 to the bottom of wave 4 at about 1.38 is only .382 of the whole length, well you can see that the Euro could go up rather sharply to about 1.73. That would be interesting, for sure. If I make the opposite assumption—that .618 of the entire move had already occurred at around 1.38 then the entire move would end at 1.4663. This to me seems very reasonable especially combined with the wishy-washy way the pair has been behaving.

You could say this entire correction isn’t a zigzag at all but a flat. But I’m not going there. For one thing, I have a life to lead. Also, there are other pairs I want to look at.

Remember where I’m at right now. I entered at the top of this little range with a tight stop so the worst that can happen is that I’ll take a small loss. If I take that loss the market is telling me something important and I’ll have better information to base the next trade upon. I can also move to breakeven as it hits the lower part of the range so I’ll have no loss at all if taken out.

GBP/JPY

Yesterday I also want long GBP/JPY. I’ve moved my stop to 60 pips profit. This was a straightforward buy at support after a steep fall. It’s as simple as falling off a log, not that I’ve ever actually fallen off a log. It’s my favorite kind of trade—very small risk because you can set a tight stop and good upside potential. To be honest it’s probably time to start looking at shorting it but I’ll keep you posted. Ranging, sideways markets seem to be the rule right now.

EUR/GBP
Finally, I think the EUR/GBP is interesting. Take a look at my 3 hour, 3 box Point and Figure chart. It consolidated tightly and had a simple quadruple top before breaking out. The many small columns tell me there could be accumulation taking place. It now has drifted back near the breakout point. I’ll study this one further and keep you posted. None of the above is a trade recommendation. All my analysis may well be wrong, wrong, wrong. Trading carries a substantial degree of risk.

© 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.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Waiting for Entries

What will the Euro do this coming week? It doesn’t take much in the way of technical analysis to see that the pair is in an uptrend. Then there was the strong move up this past week—it started the week at 1.4295 and ended it at 1.4570 (the high for the week was 1.4635). Sentiment is bullish, judging by the news reports (see the word cloud from the last post). Even if you believe that this is a primary wave correction (Elliott wave speak), there’s little doubt, it seems, it could go higher, possibly up to 1.48 or so. But as I said in my last post it’s not moving right now. If you want to go long you’d have to wait for a reasonable entry point. So two questions:

1) If you were going to go long where is a reasonable entry point?
2) What do you do while you wait for it to get to that point? That’s the forbearance part I mentioned last time.

The first question is easy. Depending on your approach you can answer it a number of ways. I could use my 3 hour P&F chart I posted last time and hope for a retracement back to 1.4420/45. The pair closed Friday at 1.4570; its daily average true range (ATR) is 129. So that wouldn’t be such a stretch. Or I could use Fib levels, which would also bring me in at 1.4410/55. Finally, I could wait for something with more upside potential such as letting price come back to an uptrend line drawn from May which also coincides roughly with the 50 EMA on the daily chart. That would mean I’d enter around 1.4225/75. That would probably require waiting a few days at least. (Note that if I did take that approach, I’d want to carefully assess market conditions when it reached that point). Or I could wait for it to break out of some major resistance levels which would involve the highs in late 2008.

Why not just go long now if you think the Euro is bullish? Jessie Livermore answered it best when he wrote, “In a narrow market when prices are not getting anywhere to speak of but move within a narrow range, there is no sense trying to anticipate what the next big movement is going to be—up or down. The thing to do is to watch the market…and make up your mind that you will not take an interest until the price breaks through in either direction.” (Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, 1993)

Regardless of approach, what do you do while you’re waiting for your entry? If you think a market is going up you can fall into being fearful that you’ll lose out. This can make you jump in when the market is at a top. One answer is distraction. This can be as simple as putting on your headphones and listening to some music or doing the analysis on another pair. Or focus on how much you can lose if you’re wrong. Actually write down the numbers or plug them into Excel. Read them out loud to yourself. Traders often trade from the silence of their inner thoughts or with the babble of financial news in the background. Hearing your voice speak the results of an analysis, especially if it involves potential loss, can be effective in combating the urge to just put on a trade.

Relaxation anchoring is another technique. You do this by practicing progressive relaxation and then, when deeply relaxed, breathe in with the phrase, “I am relaxed,” and exhale with the phrase, “I am calm.” Each time you say the word “relaxed” squeeze your right thumb. If you practice this a few times it will only take squeezing your right thumb to bring on a more relaxed state during your normal activities. You can also anchor to a pleasant experience. I’ll include some audio links sometime in the future with both these approaches. Email me at dianne@feldyusa.com or post a comment with your email if you want to be on a list to receive them.

None of the above is a trade recommendation—in fact I’m short the Euro right now but that’s not a trade recommendation either.

© 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.

Friday, September 11, 2009

EUR/USD




The EUR/USD had a nice run up earlier this week but it's not moving worth a sou right now. Where's the action? But this is what trading is all about--waiting for another move that will be definitive. Trading is nothing if not about patience and yet patience is the one trait many traders seem to lack. Actually, patience isn't the bon mot. It's too bland. Forebearance would be better--a determined struggle to not give in to negative feelings. How many times has someone bailed out of a trade after the pair waffled back and forth and then watched as it took off in whatever direction one was originally in? Or, getting into a trade, one starts to second guess oneself?

There are various ways to cope with this and I'll be getting into some of them over the weekend. For now, I thought I'd amuse myself by building a word cloud of some of the recent news about the Euro. Isn't that cute?

The first chart is my 3 hour/3 box P&F chart, based on close. It shows the uptrend, an engaging consolidation period, and the pair is now at a key resistance level. If it can break through....but I'm getting ahead of myself. Note the symmetry in time of the last moves up. It evokes the three-drive pattern from which one could expect a break down.




The last chart is the hourly updated from yesterday. One could still make the case for the broadening pattern but there is also the appearance of an upward wedge with its two upsloping lines and multiple touches. However, one could also argue for a pennant.

More important to me is that there has been selling that has come in several times when the pair has achieved this level (take a look at the 15-minute chart). So even in the face of the strong uptrend, I feel OK with my short with its teensy-weensy, yellow polka dotted stop. Remember, I will reverse myself if and when taken out, depending on what the market shows me.

Now I have to remind anyone reading this that these aren't trade recommendations. They're just my musings. All trading carries significant risks the lawyers tell us to say. And you know something? They're right. That's why I keep my stops small.