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Unfortunately as I'm typing this, price has just come down again, approaching the entry-point hmm.

 

Since I'm literally trading this blind, my assumption was that if it is waivering a bit up and down- don't panic.

A. People who went short may be closing out of positions

B. Trailing stops or Stop Losses are being triggered

 

So this will pop a tad bit of supply into the market. It may range around down on that bottom for a while. How low was the volume on the shakeout?

If it was HIGH, it may test again (They will be looking to see if the floating supply is gone!)

 

I'd hang tight- without seeing the chart- I'd say you are sitting pretty on a long!

Sledge

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Unfortunately as I'm typing this, price has just come down again, approaching the entry-point hmm.

 

 

What the ****? 12300 right now... it just broke lower like nothing. :confused:

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I'm just a newbie compared to you guys but from my observations I'd say candle formations and VSA compliment eachother very nicely. They sort of go hand-in-hand, no use comparing one against the other. Use both and things become much clearer. I'm sure there are plenty of trades that can be taken just by using candles alone, but VSA can give you a greater understanding of the potential of certain moves. Just my humble opinion...

 

I couldn't agree more. That's all I was trying to do - help some guys out with a little thing that could aid in their trading.

 

Then it turned into a pissing match of what the candle was called... what a joke. The name of the pattern is useless but that was falling on deaf ears.

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Since I'm literally trading this blind, my assumption was that if it is waivering a bit up and down- don't panic.

A. People who went short may be closing out of positions

B. Trailing stops or Stop Losses are being triggered

 

So this will pop a tad bit of supply into the market. It may range around down on that bottom for a while. How low was the volume on the shakeout?

If it was HIGH, it may test again (They will be looking to see if the floating supply is gone!)

 

I'd hang tight- without seeing the chart- I'd say you are sitting pretty on a long!

Sledge

 

I wish that was the case.

Here's what happened next. :(

 

 

ym_wtf.thumb.GIF.d9946325b8605ad23ff544f896c81b6d.GIF

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I know this is not standard VSA work, but just take a look and see if it can help in your trading at all.

 

Bf-

It ALL helps. Luckily for me I started trading with candles and later switched to Bar Charts, so I feel lucky I can look at a Candle Bar and still see a Bar Chart form in my brain.

 

As far as VSA- I see a WSB down, closing on the high with Ultra High Volume-looks like stopping volume to me and a "licking my chops" point of entry to go long!

 

I'd ask you keep posting what you see, this is the second one of these you posted, in as many days, and it just keeps it "top of mind" in my brain (hopefully other posters as well?!) To be able to "See it, know what it means, react"

Sledge

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I wish that was the case.

Here's what happened next. :(

 

 

[ATTACH]5705[/ATTACH]

 

Zeon-

Ok well with the initial chart you posted, you knew to look out for the Downward test (which came in around 12330) So you see the test, and enter your long at 12330. You ride that to the 12420. You hang on and let that bar form and when it forms into an upthrust, that would have been my signal to exit for now.

 

At very worst, utilize what Tom Williams says, you see TWO DOWN BARS IN A ROW (in this case) you would have exited at 12370 and still made profit.

 

One other point, look at the volume on the down move that headed towards the resistance- it was decreasing- yes, but look at it in perspective to the PREVIOUS down move that didn't break it- it is higher, it had a great chance to break that resisitance- and indeed it did!

 

Hope you got in low and exited on that upthrust! Or shorted after it!

Sledge

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Zeon-

Ok well with the initial chart you posted, you knew to look out for the Downward test (which came in around 12330) So you see the test, and enter your long at 12330. You ride that to the 12420. You hang on and let that bar form and when it forms into an upthrust, that would have been my signal to exit for now.

 

At very worst, utilize what Tom Williams says, you see TWO DOWN BARS IN A ROW (in this case) you would have exited at 12370 and still made profit.

 

One other point, look at the volume on the down move that headed towards the resistance- it was decreasing- yes, but look at it in perspective to the PREVIOUS down move that didn't break it- it is higher, it had a great chance to break that resisitance- and indeed it did!

 

Hope you got in low and exited on that upthrust! Or shorted after it!

Sledge

 

 

I take it you mean "support" when you said resistance?

 

And no, I didn't exit because the plan is to ride the trade till the next resistance level. Doing anything else would mean I'm just greedy and taking profits quickly.

 

I'm sorry, but I don't know how much worse this can get now. :shrug:

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I take it you mean "support" when you said resistance?

 

And no, I didn't exit because the plan is to ride the trade till the next resistance level. Doing anything else would mean I'm just greedy and taking profits quickly.

 

I'm sorry, but I don't know how much worse this can get now. :shrug:

 

Well, I'm not sure--if the market is as a whole (larger timeframe) is in a downward trend, and it is looking for lower prices, I'd say resistance is appropriate.

 

My personal trading style may differ from yours, but I honestly would not think that taking your money off the table when you saw such a drastic retreat is greedy- it is smart.

 

Sledge

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I may be talking out my backside here, but I think you are across the pond. If so then 1230 on your chart equates with 830 NY time. My analysis is based on this assumption.

 

a: This is the key candle. WRB formed when there was a news release about Jobless claims.

 

b: High volume up bar that closes in the middle of its range. The close in the middle of the range shows that supply has entered. If all the volume was buying (demand), then the close should not be in the middle.

 

c: this is a test. It is also a squat. Some demand comes in here.

 

d: The very next bar is weakness as we have an up bar on volume less than the previous two bars closing in the middle of its range. This is no demand.

 

 

e: Price moves up a bit however. Yet we get a wide spread bar that closes on its highs on volume less than the previous two bars. This is no buying pressure. Again weakness.

 

f: Up thrust. Closing on the lows of the bar on greater volume and making a higher high than the previous bar. Note the close is now equal to the level of the close on the test.

 

h: the chart says hidden selling, however there is nothing "hidden" about it. We have a widespread down bar on high volume. Most down bars on high volume are selling. If the next bar had been up then there would of been hidden buying.

 

edit: sorry neglected to say that the first sign of supply was on a.

untitled1.thumb.png.fbf0f0a0b73be04aa095f7a411f3c736.png

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I may be talking out my backside here, but I think you are across the pond. If so then 1230 on your chart equates with 830 NY time. My analysis is based on this assumption.

 

a: This is the key candle. WRB formed when there was a news release about Jobless claims.

 

b: High volume up bar that closes in the middle of its range. The close in the middle of the range shows that supply has entered. If all the volume was buying (demand), then the close should not be in the middle.

 

c: this is a test. It is also a squat. Some demand comes in here.

 

d: The very next bar is weakness as we have an up bar on volume less than the previous two bars closing in the middle of its range. This is no demand.

 

 

e: Price moves up a bit however. Yet we get a wide spread bar that closes on its highs on volume less than the previous two bars. This is no buying pressure. Again weakness.

 

f: Up thrust. Closing on the lows of the bar on greater volume and making a higher high than the previous bar. Note the close is now equal to the level of the close on the test.

 

h: the chart says hidden selling, however there is nothing "hidden" about it. We have a widespread down bar on high volume. Most down bars on high volume are selling. If the next bar had been up then there would of been hidden buying.

 

edit: sorry neglected to say that the first sign of supply was on a.

 

So is there any actual trading taking place here or just a bunch of observations after the fact? Where are trades actually taking place on your analysis CW? I've laid out where I enter and the potential profit. Even told you when I took +8 and it ran for more.

 

Just curious if there is real trading being done there or just a little after the fact look. ;)

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Bf-

It ALL helps. Luckily for me I started trading with candles and later switched to Bar Charts, so I feel lucky I can look at a Candle Bar and still see a Bar Chart form in my brain.

 

As far as VSA- I see a WSB down, closing on the high with Ultra High Volume-looks like stopping volume to me and a "licking my chops" point of entry to go long!

 

I'd ask you keep posting what you see, this is the second one of these you posted, in as many days, and it just keeps it "top of mind" in my brain (hopefully other posters as well?!) To be able to "See it, know what it means, react"

Sledge

 

Well said Sledge. You hit the nail on the head - WRB analysis and being aware of these can be critical on higher timeframes as we saw this morning.

 

In my view, a WRB simply shows a TEMPORARY imbalance between the bulls and bears. To have that followed up by a high volume hammer... WOW... can't ask for anything more.

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So is there any actual trading taking place here or just a bunch of observations after the fact? Where are trades actually taking place on your analysis CW? I've laid out where I enter and the potential profit. Even told you when I took +8 and it ran for more.

 

Just curious if there is real trading being done there or just a little after the fact look. ;)

 

No trade here BF I was just making some observations on a chart posted by Z.

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I take it you mean "support" when you said resistance?

 

And no, I didn't exit because the plan is to ride the trade till the next resistance level. Doing anything else would mean I'm just greedy and taking profits quickly.

 

I'm sorry, but I don't know how much worse this can get now. :shrug:

 

I tend to agree that if you are plus some points atleast move your stop to B/E. If you aren't going to move your stop to B/E then you have to be able to tape read and read order flow very well. As mentioned an example of this would be see 2 down bars tells you that order flow is changing again, possibly. I haven't looked at your specific example, so pardon me, but you want to increasing volume on candle closing up, but not excessive, and decreasing volume on the down bars. If you are seeing something other than that expect that your long may be drying up. Just some suggestions for you. By no means do I have the grail.

 

Another suggestion, wait for it to clear that resistance overhead and then buy a pullback on lower volume. You will have missed points, but you want be trying to guess if the trend is going to change. If you attempt to buy that pullback be aware of where the next overhead resistance is to the left of you entry or on the next higher time frame chart you look at. I do think filtering these set ups with NYSE tick or Ticki for Naz would help. Just some food for thought.

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Just curious if there is real trading being done there or just a little after the fact look. ;)

 

 

All of my posts from today were in real time brownsfan. I'm not hoping on much real time comments as other people are probably trading their own stuff. I appreciate anybody who's willing to help me explore this further and help me out in gaining a better understanding, because so far this would be the 14th losing trade in-a-row... :(

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I tend to agree that if you are plus some points atleast move your stop to B/E. If you aren't going to move your stop to B/E then you have to be able to tape read and read order flow very well. As mentioned an example of this would be see 2 down bars tells you that order flow is changing again, possibly. I haven't looked at your specific example, so pardon me, but you want to increasing volume on candle closing up, but not excessive, and decreasing volume on the down bars. If you are seeing something other than that expect that your long may be drying up. Just some suggestions for you. By no means do I have the grail.

 

Thanks for the suggestions. Moving my stop to breakeven is usually something I do after price has moved closer to my target. However in this case, the 'signal' to move the stop was just missed, if it went a bit higher I'd have move my stop. I definitely use this strategy, because it's very frustrating once you see a profitable trade turn into a loser.

 

Another suggestion, wait for it to clear that resistance overhead and then buy a pullback on lower volume. You will have missed points, but you want be trying to guess if the trend is going to change. If you attempt to buy that pullback be aware of where the next overhead resistance is to the left of you entry or on the next higher time frame chart you look at. I do think filtering these set ups with NYSE tick or Ticki for Naz would help. Just some food for thought.

 

I've observed the TICK for some time and I've also noticed dbphoenix employing the TICK for the NQ, but according to what I've read the tick can sometimes invalidate a good setup, or at other times confirm a bad setup. For the time being I think it's best if I keep it just to price & volume because the signals already seem to be confusing enough... If I'd add another layer I fear I might have tick saying go long, price saying short and volume saying stay flat... if you know what I mean.

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Zeon, just a suggestion to keep in mind. If you look at a daily chart of the ES, for example we appear to have formed a bottom as off 1/22 and 1/23. Then on the 17th of this month we retested that area on lesser volume. So from a PV we are attempting to transition from bear to bull market. You have alot of folks that look at 50 and 200 DMA on the daily, including big funds. We are struggling at the 50 right now. This is normal action to be expected as the ES, and it's siblings attempt to transition from bear to bull a zig zag back and forth. This zig and zag action can knock us out of perfectly good trades on small time frame.

 

This is actually healthy as long as we don't take out the low of 1255 with increasing volume. The greater the energy built up in the accumulation phase the great the move up with be. The ES is attempting to form accumulation phase right now on the daily. If you look at your own set up how many candles or bars made up that accumulation phase, many not many? If not many than the move up many not go far as there wasn't much stored energy. My point being to all this is be nimble for the next week. I think your expectation of it retesting overhead resistance is correct and it's important to remember that this is game of probabilities not certaintities.

 

You have end of quarter and there may be some bad earnings for banks and others. I don't trade off of fundamentals, but it's silly to not think that some really good or bad earnings isn't going to affect your position.

 

This is debatable, but it's the bigger money which trades off of bigger time frame that propel the big moves, not us day traders we just need to read the macro picture correct and ride the wave. The Macro picture to me is in a state of transition. From bear to attempting to be a new bull market. I think Wyckoff called it hitch hiking, riding the wave that is. Anyway hope this helps. Good trading to all.:)

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I am away out of town and not trading through early next week. I won't be near a trading computer during the weekdays.

 

A few quick comments:

 

Just because there is a support level and price hits it and bounces from it does not mean we are now in an uptrend. It also does not mean that price will travel from that support area to the next overhead resistance area, especially in a downtrend.

 

Trends:

 

A simple, but effective rule of thumb for a downtrend is to see a series of lower highs and lower lows. Once you see a lower high followed by a lower low, you should be thinking short, watching for low volume, narrow spreads, and looking for no demand and upthrusts on the next rally.

 

On Monday, the market made a high. Tuesday saw a lower high. Yesterday, there was a lower low and another lower high -- I am doing this from memory (I don't have charts in front of me), so I could be off, but you should get my drift. We are in an established down trend. Resistance for today was at yesterday afternoon's rapid run up (about 3:00-3:15, or so). That is key resistance for today because obvious supply came in there, driving the market down to the lower support area (about 1336, I think), making another lower low. Put up a 30 or 60-min chart that includes this week's data (from Monday) and draw trend lines. You should be able to see the downtrend clearly. (I think I posted a chart showing the downtrend yesterday?)

 

Weakness on the daily:

 

Sebastian also provided us with an astute analysis of the market. He saw significant supply confirmed by a failed test. Just a casual look at the daily chart would show a recession of volume on the last few days of the rise, indicating some level of weakness.

 

Practical application to trading:

 

Tom Williams makes a clear point in his book: As a trader, you really want the market to tell you what to do. During the last two days, it was saying you wanted to be short. If you take a long trade at support in this kind of environment because you see a little demand come in, that's OK, but it is best to trade this as scalp only, until we have an uptrend or a clear indication that good demand is coming into the market and the trend is likely to change. You can't expect bigger moves on long trades in a down trend. In any event, most trades over the last two days were best taken on the short side.

 

See you next week,

 

Eiger

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it's very frustrating once you see a profitable trade turn into a loser.

 

Zeon-

All I can hear over and over in my head is Todd K saying "Bank $" "You've got to Bank $"

 

Their is NO SHAME in taking a quick hit and banking $. If it didn't go where you anticipated- bank your money and after you are counting your cash, you can analyze why it didn't, learn from it and look for your next set-up!

 

Sledge

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Beautiful "Head and Shoulders" pattern formed on the GBP/USD this AM.

As it should the "Left Shoulder" volume is higher than the right. After a wild night in the London session we are having some slight pullback occouring as NY opens with London taking profits, and some sideways consolidation.

 

My position:

Pending order placed at 1.9896. This would be about 30 pips below the "Neckline" and would be a safe entry with plenty of room to run if triggered. I doubt it will go today, but it is in, just in case- while I am away from my trading platform, the pullback retreats enough and downward we go!

 

Sledge

 

head_shoulders.bmp

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Sledge, I know it's not VSA per se but I think that's potentially a nice set up. A gentleman named Jason Jankovsky that I learned some good stuff from on price and volume told me that H & S is one of the best TA set ups. I don't monitor this market so I have no idea how it turned out. I have studied these and as I recall you want to see the neckline break on increasing volume and then a pullback on lower volume, possibly a no demand or combo no demand upthrust would be a nice potential set up. Anyway hope you made some $$$ if you took it.

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FIRST PRINCIPLES:

 

Someone in the first VSA thread mentioned the concept of first principles, I would like to continue that discussion.

 

I saw a quote from a trading site called eminidaytrader. No affiliation, just giving credit where credit is due. This quote could be described as one of there first principles. I would like to compare and contrast this principle with the first principles of Volume Spread Analysis.

 

" Markets move up to find sellers and down to find buyers. That's all their is.."" eminidaytrader.

 

Of course any discussion of VSA first principles, must begin with THE first principle:

 

1. Markets are manipulated.

 

Principle 1a. would be:

 

1a. Strength enters on down bars and weakness enters on up bars. At first glance this seems to be compatible with the above quote, but we must delve deeper into this to understand the difference. I will do this by first looking at 4 key vsa bar types and then by examining a more general bar situation.

 

Test:

 

The ideal test is a narrow range bar that makes a lower low, closes down from the previous bar on volume less than the previous two bars and closes on its middle or high. Therefore we have a down bar. However, what the BBs are actually doing is Not looking to attract buyers, they are looking to attract sellers. Price is moved down to see if sellers will come into the market. That is why a good test has low volume. No sellers enter as price falls. Buyers entering would actually be met by more supply causing prices to fall, not rise. Failed tests therefore have high volume because supply was found (entered) on the down bar.

 

No Demand:

 

In many respects this is like a test to the upside. The ideal no demand bar will be an up bar that makes a higher high on volume less than the previous two bars and closes on its middle or low. A sign of no demand shows that there is little or no professional interest in higher prices. Prices is driven up not to find sellers, it is driven up to find (or not find) smart money buyers. if the no demand is properly placed, the supply already entered before the no demand bar. While we do not think in terms of a failed no demand, an up bar with increasing volume shows buying pressure. Therefore this would mean up bars attracting buying (more on this later).

 

Up Thrusts:

 

There are two types of up thrusts.

 

1. Up thrust in the form of no demand. This type of up thrust will be a wider range bar making a higher high, closing up from the previous bar, closing on higher volume and closing on its low. Now here is the rub; an up thrust is used to entice the herd into buying. When the actual intention is to see price head south. In other words, price is increased not to attract sellers or find where sellers enter, it is increased to bring in (late) buyers. This is manipulation. The volume here is low however, as not many buyers enter.

 

2. Normal Up thrust. Here the bar is wide and the close is ideally up and on the low, but the volume is higher than the previous bar. In this case, the volume represents the herd entering long (buying) at the top when the actual direction the BBs intend to take the market is down. The herd will then have to sell at a loss which further fuels the down move.

 

Joel Pozen likes to say, "Buying does not cause rising prices; rising prices causes buying. Selling does not cause falling prices; falling prices causes selling". This is what the BBs understand and why the herd tends to buy tops and sell bottoms. The above quote fails to understand this aspect of human nature.

 

Now, as for the idea that strength enters on down bars. Down bars on heavy volume created by a "Bad news" event are used by the BBs to attract sellers (late) and price usually turns around and head up. In other words, the idea is to bring in sellers by lowering prices as opposed to find buyers. Again, this underscores what Joel says.

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Hi Candle W;

 

A good text well written, but you have missed a point, Upthrusts are also there to catch stops from other shorts who can also read the balance of supply and demand, especially those who got in too early, and it happens all the time, prices are moves around deliberately to process orders and to catch stops, also to hide professional strategy to manipulate prices to make a profit, as this is the objective of the professionals in the first place. It is a good point to note that the professionals are also trying to catch the other professional money out as well, you have to think of the market as a war zone where you do not have 2 opposing armies, just a free for all firefight where everyone is fighting everyone.

 

 

Regards Sebastian

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.........In my view, a WRB simply shows a TEMPORARY imbalance between the bulls and bears. To have that followed up by a high volume hammer... WOW... can't ask for anything more.

 

 

Interesting take BF. WRBs represent a change in the supply/demand dynamic as well as so much more. They can play various roles. The attached chart shows WRBs playing multiple roles as the market transitions into an up trend.

 

However I want to focus here on the two tests.

 

Leaning Lesson:

 

Note this first test. This test is rather hard to see and would be missed by many (including some of the BBs). It is made easier for those who were predisposed to look to go long as part of a "fading the volatility spike" trade. The bar has a narrow range closing up and closes on the middle of its range on volume less than the previous two bars. Very tricky. In fact, many would be looking at this bar as a possible no demand until the next bar is up. As you can see price moved up from this test.

 

However the BBs are not sure if there is latent supply in the market. They have seen demand enter on both volatility spike and the next up bar. Yet, the nature of the test bar leaves something to be desired.

 

Now we skip to the second test. This is almost text book. It closes equal to the previous bar, has a narrower range, makes a lower low, and closes on its high. Two very important things about this test:

 

(1) Not only is the volume less than the previous two bars, but it is less than the previous test as well.

 

(2) This test trades back into the range of the body of the WRB but does not trade as low as the first test.

 

If there had been any doubt after the first test, its was all removed on the second one. This pattern actually repeats often and is very powerful. One test on low volume followed by another test with less volume than the first test and not trading as low as the first test.

VSA16.thumb.png.7d61273ecc8c4a88caf8338da1c28352.png

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Sledge, I know it's not VSA per se but I think that's potentially a nice set up. A gentleman named Jason Jankovsky that I learned some good stuff from on price and volume told me that H & S is one of the best TA set ups. I don't monitor this market so I have no idea how it turned out. I have studied these and as I recall you want to see the neckline break on increasing volume and then a pullback on lower volume, possibly a no demand or combo no demand upthrust would be a nice potential set up. Anyway hope you made some $$$ if you took it.

 

I took a bit off it, but as it is panning out- it is not as strong of a drop as it should be- so it is very dangerous ground right now. Their is a major trendline right in about a 40 pip distance from the neckline and obviously as it rides up and down that trend line gets closer to the neckline.

 

It appears the trendline is holding- Everytime it breaks the trendline, it quickly retreats back into the trendline. So this may have a few downward gasps- but it is far from the monster drop H&S formations tend to bring.

 

I actually took a long this AM. Long at 1.9859

T/P Target 1.9884

 

It hit about 30 min ago or so.

Sledge

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      Hey guys , what are the main things you look for to detect if the consolidation area is accumulating or distributing ? 
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The administration has not yet released the policy, but investors expect it to be the most expansionary in a century. President Trump is due to speak at 20:00 GMT. On HFM's Calendar the speech is stated as "US Liberation Day Tariff Announcement". Currently, analysts are expecting Trump’s Tariff Plan to impose tariffs on the EU, chips and pharmaceuticals later today as well as reciprocal tariffs. Economists have a good idea of how these tariffs may take effect, but reciprocal tariffs are still unspecified. In addition to this, 25% tariffs on the car industry will start tomorrow. The tariffs on the foreign cars industry are a factor which will particularly impact Japan. Although, traders should note that this is what is expected and is not yet finalised. Last week, President Trump stated that he would implement retaliatory tariffs but allow exemptions for certain US trade partners. Treasury Secretary Mr Bessent and National Economic Council Director Mr Hassett suggested that the restrictions would primarily target 15 countries responsible for the bulk of the US trade deficit. However, yesterday, Trump contradicted these statements, asserting that additional duties would be imposed on any country that has implemented similar measures against US products. The day’s volatility will depend on which route the US administration takes. The harshness of the policy will influence both the Japanese Yen as well as the US Dollar.   USDJPY 5-Minute Chart   US Economic and Employment Data The JOLT Job Vacancies figure fell below expectations and is lower than the previous month’s figure. The JOLT Job Vacancies read 7.57 million whereas the average of the past 6 months is 7.78 million. The ISM Manufacturing Index also fell below the key level of 50.00 and was 5 points lower than what analysts were expecting. The data is negative for the US Dollar, particularly as the latest release applies more pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. However, this is unlikely to happen if the trade policy ignites higher and stickier inflation. In the Bank of Japan’s Governor's latest speech, Mr Ueda said that the tariffs are likely to trigger higher inflation. USDJPY Technical Analysis Currently, the Japanese Yen Index is the worst performing of the day while the US Dollar Index is more or less unchanged. However, this is something traders will continue to monitor as the EU session starts. In the 2-hour timeframe, the USDJPY is trading at the neutral level below the 75-bar EMA and 100-bar SMA. The RSI and MACD is also at the neutral level meaning traders should be open to price movements in either direction. On the smaller timeframes, such as the 5-minute timeframe, there is a slight bias towards a bullish outcome. However, this is only likely if the latest bearish swing does not drop below the 200-Bar SMA.     The key resistant level can be seen at 150.262 and the support level at 149.115. Breakout levels are at 149.988 and 149.674. Key Takeaway Points: Job vacancies hit a five-month low, and the ISM Manufacturing PMI missed expectations, adding pressure on the Federal Reserve regarding interest rate decisions. Traders await confirmation on Trump’s tariff policy, which is expected to impact the EU, chips, pharmaceuticals, and foreign car industries. The severity of the tariffs will influence both the JPY and the USD, with traders waiting for final policy details. The Japanese Yen Index is the worst index of the day while the US Dollar Index is unchanged. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Michalis Efthymiou HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • HLF Herbalife stock, watch for a bull flag breakout above 9.02 at https://stockconsultant.com/?HLF
    • Date: 1st April 2025.   Will Gold’s Rally Hold Strong as New Trade Tariffs Take Effect Tomorrow?   Gold continues to increase in value for a sixth consecutive day and is trading more than 17% higher in 2025. Amid fear of higher inflation, a recession and the tariffs war escalating investors continue to invest into Gold pushing demand higher. The trade policy from April 2nd onwards continues to be a key factor for the whole market. Can Gold maintain its upward trend? Trade Policy From Tomorrow Onwards Starting as soon as tomorrow, a 25% tariff will be imposed on all passenger cars imported into the United States. While this White House policy is anticipated to negatively affect European industrial performance, it will also lead to higher transportation and maintenance costs for everyday American taxpayers. The negative impact expected on both the EU and US is one of the reasons investors continue to buy Gold. Additionally, last month, President Donald Trump announced reciprocal sanctions against any trade partners that impose import restrictions on US goods. Furthermore, tariffs on products from Canada and the EU could increase even more if they attempt to coordinate a response. Overall, investors continue to worry that new trade barriers will prompt retaliatory measures, particularly from China, the Eurozone, and Japan. Any retaliation is likely to escalate the trade conflict and prompt another reaction from the US. Experts at Goldman Sachs and other investment banks warn that this will lead to rising inflation and unemployment. They also caution that it could effectively halt economic growth in the US.   XAUUSD 1-Hour Chart   The Weakness In The US Dollar Another factor which is allowing the price of XAUUSD to increase in value is the US Dollar which has been unable to maintain any bullish momentum. Despite last week’s Core PCE Price Index rising to its highest level since February 2024, the US Dollar has been unable to see any significant rise in value. Due to the US Dollar and Gold's inverse correlation, the price of Gold is benefiting from the Dollar weakness. Investors worry that new trade barriers will prompt retaliatory measures from China, the Eurozone, and Japan, potentially escalating the conflict. Experts at The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. believe that such actions by the US administration will drive rising inflation and unemployment while effectively halting economic growth in the country. Can Gold Maintain Momentum? When it comes to technical analysis, the price of Gold is not trading at a price where oscillators are indicating the instrument is overbought. The Relative Strength Index currently trades at 68.88, outside of the overbought area, since Gold’s price fell 0.65% during this morning’s session. However, even with this decline, the price still remains 0.40% higher than the day’s open price. In terms of fundamental analysis, there continues to be plenty of factors indicating the price could continue to rise. However, the price movement of the week will also partially depend on the employment data from the US. The US is due to release the JOLTS Job Vacancies for February this afternoon, the ADP Non-Farm Employment Change tomorrow, and the NFP Change and Unemployment Rate on Friday. If all data reads higher than expectations, investors may look to sell to lock in profits at the high price. Key Takeaway Points: Gold’s Rally Continues – Up 17% in 2025 as investors seek safety from inflation, recession fears, and trade tensions. Trade War Impact – New US tariffs and potential retaliation from China, the EU, and Japan drive uncertainty, boosting Gold demand. Weak US Dollar – The Dollar’s struggle supports Gold’s rise due to their inverse correlation. Gold’s Outlook – Uptrend may continue, but US jobs data could trigger profit-taking. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Michalis Efthymiou HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • Date: 31st March 2025.   Trump Confirms Tariffs on All Countries, Sending Stocks Lower.   The NASDAQ continues to trade lower due to the US confirming the latest tariffs will be on all countries. In addition to this, bearish volatility also is largely due to the higher inflation data from Friday. The NASDAQ declines to its lowest price since September 11th 2024. Core PCE Price Index - Inflation Increases Again! The PCE Price Index read 2.5% aligning with expert forecasts not triggering any alarm bells. However, the Core PCE Price Index rose from 0.3% to 0.4% MoM and from 2.7% to 2.8% YoY, signalling growing inflationary pressure. This increases the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will maintain elevated interest rates for an extended period. The NASDAQ fell 2.60% due to the higher inflation reading which is known to pressure the stock market due to pressure on consumer demand and a more hawkish Federal Reserve. Boston Fed President Susan Collins recently commented that tariffs could drive up inflation, though the long-term impact remains uncertain. She told journalists that a short-term spike is the most probable outcome but believes the current pause in monetary policy adjustments is appropriate given the prevailing uncertainties. Although, certain investment banks such as JP Morgan actually believe the Federal Reserve will be forced into cutting rates. This is due to expectations that the economy will struggle under the new trade policy. For example, JP Morgan expects the Federal Reserve to delay rate cuts but will quickly cut towards the end of 2025. Market Risk Appetite Takes a Hit! A big factor for the day is the drop in the risk appetite of investors. This can be seen from the VIX which is up almost 6%, Gold which is trading 1.30% higher and the Japanese Yen which is the day’s best performing currency. Most safe haven assets, bar the US Dollar, increase in value. It is also worth noting that all indices are decreasing in value during this morning's Asian session with the Nikkei225 and NASDAQ witnessing the strongest decline. Previously the stock market rose in value as investors heard rumours that tariffs would only be on certain countries. This bullish swing occurred between March 14th and 25th. Over the weekend, President Donald Trump indicated that the upcoming tariffs would apply to all countries, not just those with the largest trade imbalances with the US. NASDAQ - Technical Analysis In terms of technical analysis, the NASDAQ continues to obtain indications that sellers control the price action. The price opens on a bearish price gap measuring 0.30% and trades below all Moving Averages on all timeframes. The NASDAQ also trades below the VWAP and almost 100% of the most influential components (stocks) are declining in value.     The next significant support level is at $18,313, and the resistance level stands at $20,367.95. Key Takeaway Points: NASDAQ falls to its lowest since September 2024 as the US confirms tariffs on all countries, adding to inflation concerns. Core PCE inflation rises to 0.4% MoM and 2.8% YoY, increasing the likelihood of prolonged high interest rates. Investor risk appetite drops as VIX jumps 6%, gold gains 1.3%, and safe-haven assets outperform. NASDAQ shows strong bearish momentum, trading below key technical levels with support at $18,313 and resistance at $20,367.95. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Michalis Efthymiou HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
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