Tuesday, 25 February 2020

Accumulation distribution is a cumulative indicator


Hi everyone!
Are you educated on indicators?

Accumulation distribution is a cumulative indicator that uses price &  volume to decide if a market is being either accumulated or distributed.

If the price is falling but the indicator is rising this indicates that buying or accumulation volume may be enough to support the price rise.
But the best way to use this indicator is by combining it with other Moving average indicators.
We have applied this to the $XRP  chart but you can use it with other assets like $AAPL $TSLA $oil $S etc...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itTSLjY0znA&t=11s


Sunday, 23 February 2020

Investing in Cryptocurrency Vs Trading the Cryptocurrency




Hi My copiers and followers on eToro know that I believe the price of Crypto will go very high in the next couple of years. We will have a big rise before and after halving happens in May and then the rise will continue for upcoming years. I have been asked 2 questions recently. 1st question is: Why you do not invest more in Crypto? My answer is my money and risk management. I will never invest more than 10% of my account in Crypto. 2nd question is: Why are you closing some of your Crypto positions if it will go higher? My strategy in regards to the Cryptocurrency has 2 parts. Invest and trade. I will leave open the investment part until I get to my targets. I will open and close some other Cryptocurrencies that I am trading on. I have been closing trades with 10% to 100% gain. I am cashing out on these. I will buy back in if the prices drop. Cheers!



Saturday, 22 February 2020

Sunday, 16 February 2020

Fibonacci Trading



Price Retracement Levels
0.236, 0.382, 0.500, 0.618, 0.764
Price Extension Levels
0, 0.382, 0.618, 1.000, 1.382, 1.618


Fibonacci Retracement Levels
In an uptrend, the general idea is to go long the market on a retracement to a Fibonacci support level. The price retracement levels can be applied to the price bar chart of any market by clicking on a significant Swing Low and dragging the cursor to the most recent potential Swing High and clicking there. This will display each of the Retracement Levels showing both the ratio and corresponding price level. Let’s take a look at some examples of markets in an uptrend. The same points made by these examples are equally applicable to markets in a downtrend.

Example 1 (Screenshot from eToro web app)

Example 1: Now let’s look at what actually happened after the Swing High occurred. The market pulled back right through the 0.382 level and continued through the 0.5 level before finding support. After that, the market resumed its upward move. Clearly buying at the 0.5 level would have been a good trade.


Example 2: The market pulled back right through the 0.382 level, however, once the selling power was exhausted, the market continued to retrace all the way up through 0.5 level before resuming its downward trend. In this case, selling at the 0.5 level would have been a good trade.

Example 2 & Example 3 (Screenshot from eToro web app)


Example 3: This is the same trade above where we used retracement to add more to the short positions at around retracement 61.8%. At the same time, we have used an expansion of 100% to take profit. You can see the downward trend continued and both Expansions 38.2.8% and 61.8 % were all hit and going towards the 100.0% Extension Levels.




Fibonacci Price Extension Levels
In an uptrend, the general idea is to take profits on a long trade at a Fibonacci Price Extension Resistance Level. The Price Extension Levels can be applied to the price bar chart of any market by clicking on a significant Swing Low and dragging the cursor to the most recent Swing High. Then by clicking on the Swing High and back down to the retracement Swing Low and clicking there. This will display each of the Extension Levels showing both the ratio and corresponding price level. Look at example 3 in a downtrend. The same points made by these examples are equally applicable to markets in an uptrend.













Monday, 29 July 2019

Online trading costs

In general, a trader could incur the following costs and personal expenses:

  1. Personal expenses: Your time, trading books, lessons, personal tutor, internet costs, computer depreciation, office costs, bots, etc...
  2. Broker-based commissions, spreads and platform fees. 
Overnight and over weekend fees or refunds
Platform fees. Some brokers may charge a fee for using their platforms. Not very common these days though.
Slippage. Normally in volatile markets, the price may change from the moment you put in the order to open a position until the time it actually executed. Slippage can work in your favour or against you depending on the direction of price movement.
Commissions are payments to your broker generally as a percentage of your trade size and different trade sizes may incur different commissions, often referred to as tiers.
The spread is the difference between the broker’s buy and sell prices for any given commodity, stock or currency pair in pips. The buy and sell spreads are different; a complete list of spreads can usually be found on the broker’s website.

Missing on gaining interest by simply putting your money into a saving account.

Friday, 26 July 2019

To be successful in hedge trading


The correlation between different markets always changes. So we should review the charts constantly to see if the correlation changes or not.
Looking at the following picture, we will notice how nicely #Gold and #BTC have been correlating during the past few months.
To lern more about hedge trading please also read the following posts from this weblog:

The importance of correlation in hedging


Hedge Trading