Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

thalestrader

Reading Charts in Real Time

Recommended Posts

Hi Folks,

 

I was going through some old trade files tonight. Here are some miny Nat Gas trades from 2 1/2 years ago. As you can see, while I was basically trading the same then as I am now (I used 1-2-3 and A-B-C interchangeably to annotate the price action that identified the trade opportunity), back then there was a CCI on my chart, and I used CCI trendline breaks to "confirm" my trades. I trying to find exactly when I shed indicators completely. As of 2.5 years ago, I was still clinging to the CCI.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

5aa70f5a92408_ThalesHistoricTrades-NatGas1.thumb.jpg.a71f71469203c095018c43231b54a5aa.jpg

5aa70f5a98986_ThalesHistoricTrades-NatGas2.thumb.jpg.7e203ba08a2c5c2c4db57ab6d7bd499d.jpg

5aa70f5a9ec01_ThalesHistoricTrades-NatGas3.thumb.jpg.c73d63e5af301af6a2af966b418d86a0.jpg

5aa70f5aa6f35_ThalesHistoricTrades-NatGas4.thumb.jpg.854b9cf730e384c9e96dfe9f7f942345.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
Hi Folks,

 

I was going through some old trade files tonight ...

 

I have said that I have purchased more than my share of indicators, systems, softwares, books, dvd's, trading courses, ect and so on over the years.

 

One of those systems was MTPredictor software. Of all the ones I had purchased, this was the one that was worth having owned. First, the trading course that comes with the software, though not the most polished, was very good and useful. Also, the software and the course really drove home the importance of risk analysis, position sizing, and R/R considerations.

 

Here is a Nat Gas trade form nearly three years ago, and that was and still is my single best day trade ever on an all in/all out trade. In this particular case, MTPredictor gave a buy signal as price was bouncing along support in an area that allowed for an extremely tight stop loss. An R unit for me at the time was $600/trade. That day, a $600 bet paid $24,234 over the course of about 6 1/2 hours.

 

At the time, I still was second guessing my self, and often I would skip signals, only to watch the market move in a way that would have allowed for a decent profit. Invariably I would then take a string of trades that would lose. Then, having been demoralized by the losses, I would skip the very next trade, and, you guessed, that was the trade that would have made me whole on my recent losses and profitable for the day or the week.

 

I wrote those notes on the chart to myself. I printed this chart out and kept it by my workstation for at least a year. It cured me of "thinking" and helped me put me firmly on the road to trading what I see. I'd have been sick if I had skipped this trade. By the way, I am still waiting for that next all in/all out 40R day trade.

 

As you can see, even after I had turned the corner and was primarily trading S/R, I was not always trading without water wings.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

5aa70f5aac52e_ThalesHistoricTrades-NatGas40R.jpg.61c1895228c8c6e4a8dbf32ae34d4c3a.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
I have said that I have purchased more than my share of indicators, systems, softwares, books, dvd's, trading courses, ect and so on over the years.

 

One of those systems was MTPredictor software. Of all the ones I had purchased, this was the one that was worth having owned. First, the trading course that comes with the software, though not the most polished, was very good and useful. Also, the software and the course really drove home the importance of risk analysis, position sizing, and R/R considerations.

 

Its shocking how so many of us go down the same path and ultimately end up in pretty much the same place... I couldn't agree more with your analysis of MTP - even if the software's signals were questionable at time, the overall packages enforcement on importance of risk, position sizing, and potential reward was a huge step forward in my trading some years ago.

 

:)

pic001.PNG.ed4861eeecea51bdce837cbd29c023fb.PNG

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

OK. Here's a possibly simple question:

 

I have a portfolio of pairs I'm looking at:

AJ AU EJ EG EU GJ GU Kiwi Loony Swiss UJ

 

How many (full not the new half) ticks would anyone opine each of these should break by before you jumped on the breakout. Similarly for stops, how much back past the last swing before you exit?

 

Opinions on one, all, or the generic issue are welcome :)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
Kiwi,

 

Really, there is nothing about which you need to apologize. I am not one to censor things (though the Brooks post above threw me for a bit of a loop as it seems ill-conceived and old out of place, if not a bit suspicious). I find your participation here valuable (and I'm sure others have as well), and I would not want to to start "filtering" your posts.

 

Thales

 

Have been going through your posts with great interest as like Dbphoenix, you are walking your talk.

Ref: to your mention of MTP predictor, Richbois of TTT (Taylor Trading) also uses that to enhance his trading , so there is obviously merit there.

BTW, have you ever employed Taylor method.

 

Also which Brooks post you are referring to, is this pertaining to Al Brooks who seems to have amassed a large following, all looking to him to open up a trading room/mentoring etc after putting up a few posts here.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  daedalus said:
Its shocking how so many of us go down the same path and ultimately end up in pretty much the same place...

 

Yes, I have known many who have tried to make it in this game. Those who have found some degree of success almost invariably have spent 10's of thousands of dollars over the years on "chart ornaments," only to find that the succes that eluded them finally came once they learned to trade with nothing other than price bars.

 

Also shocking is how easy it is for someone who does come close to what you have called "the truth of the markets," to revert back to hanging chart ornaments on their screens.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
At the time, I still was second guessing my self, and often I would skip signals, only to watch the market move in a way that would have allowed for a decent profit. Invariably I would then take a string of trades that would lose. Then, having been demoralized by the losses, I would skip the very next trade, and, you guessed, that was the trade that would have made me whole on my recent losses and profitable for the day or the week.

 

I had the same thing happen to me this week twice.

I skipped the trades that would have made my day.

It felt like I gave up on trading those days.

Lost my focus and lost interest. Went to work on some woodworking project.

It is tough to keep focusing for many hours.

 

When I used to trade without stops or used to move them, the way to cure myself was to install a small program that would pop a small message window with "DON'T MOVE STOPS" and it sounded a sound alert as well.

So after a week of this Chineese torture I was cured.

 

Taking all the trades and realizing that this is a probability game, is the next step.

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
Yes, I have known many who have tried to make it in this game. Those who have found some degree of success almost invariably have spent 10's of thousands of dollars over the years on "chart ornaments," only to find that the succes that eluded them finally came once they learned to trade with nothing other than price bars.

 

Also shocking is how easy it is for someone who does come close to what you have called "the truth of the markets," to revert back to hanging chart ornaments on their screens.

Thales

 

I am relatively new to trading and took the advice of many here on TL and I haven't ever used indicators at all on futures, like none at all. I sometimes wonder if I am missing some part of the learning process since so many have used them early on in trading.

 

I was showing my friend a trade I made on the ZS the other day and he likes the idea of bollinger bands so he wanted me to put it on my chart. I did and noticed that it would have kept me in the trade for the entire move if I had used it to confirm when to exit the entry.

Very likely a coincidence but it got me thinking, maybe I am not taking advantage of some useful indicator that would help me navigate when price gets moving lightning speed as it does on the ZS.

 

I also feel a little stupid when others talk about common indicators and I have no educated understanding of them. Do you think there are a select few indicators that everyone should at least become familiar with even if they aren't going to use them?

 

Do you think an indicator can train you to indentify something when you are new? You can always lose the indicator once you develop the eye for it in simple price action.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  Dinerotrader said:
I am relatively new to trading and took the advice of many here on TL and I haven't ever used indicators at all on futures, like none at all.

 

I wish I had been able to experience the same when I was starting out.

 

  Dinerotrader said:
I was showing my friend a trade I made on the ZS the other day and he likes the idea of bollinger bands so he wanted me to put it on my chart. I did and noticed that it would have kept me in the trade for the entire move if I had used it to confirm when to exit the entry.

 

A chart would be nice, Dinero, share and share alike. Why not show us how you decided to exit the trade, and then take another shot showing how you would have used the BB's to remain in the trade?

 

  Dinerotrader said:
I also feel a little stupid when others talk about common indicators and I have no educated understanding of them.

 

Perhaps this should make you feel fortunate rather than stupid.

 

  Dinerotrader said:
Do you think an indicator can train you to identify something when you are new? You can always lose the indicator once you develop the eye for it in simple price action.

 

You are free to do what you want, use what you want, and experiment with what you want.

The question is will you ever develop the eye for following price as effectively as you wish if you are splitting your attention between price and an indicator(s).

 

I feel that my development was delayed by an undue reliance upon indicators as I searched for the Holy Grail.

 

I think daedalus's post #1169 of this thread may be offer some things for you to consider before deciding whether or not you will sit down to feast at the indicator smorgasbord:

 

  daedalus said:
I just thought I would comment on the indicator discussion because I really do agree that more is not more. The most efficient and powerful design will always be the one in which nothing else can be subtracted from it without an adverse effect in outcome.

 

I was browsing through another trading forum where people were all trading the same holy grail method using a bunch of indicators, and some of their trades were awesome, but like usual a lot of them were bad entries and getting people chopped around. Below are a couple of screen shots of their trade examples. Note the patterns that is printed up on a LOT of the good winning entries... is EXACTLY what thales has been instructing in this thread.

 

I think far too often we find ourselves looking at the trees (indicators) and we just can't see the forest (price).

 

If these guys want to use their indicators for confirmation - fine but they should realize (and they don't) that the power of their winning setups is not because of or due to the indicators but rather the underlying price behavior or L, H, HL and H, L, LH.

 

Indicators can be helpful in my opinion but ONLY when we respect them for what they are and use them in a useful way (ie not as entry triggers). In my opinion a useful way to use an indicator is limited to identifying areas for a trade (MA's used for S/R, Bolinger/Keltners for S/R, and Oscillator for Trend Exhaustion, or Using them to give us pointers on holding or folding trades). But we MUST respect the underlying truth that the indicator works because of price and tells us what price has already told us, and thus we must respect price first and foremost as the ultimate truth teller.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

After seeing Michaelangelo's sculpture of David, an

art student asked the great artist how anyone could

make something so beautiful and emotionally moving

from a block of stone. Michaelangelo replied, "I simply

chipped away the excess so David could emerge from

the stone."

 

See the analogy?

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  Dinerotrader said:
Do you think there are a select few indicators that everyone should at least become familiar with even if they aren't going to use them?

 

Do you think an indicator can train you to indentify something when you are new? You can always lose the indicator once you develop the eye for it in simple price action.

 

To answer your first question. I think its fine to understand how a basic indicator functions - the caveat being that you don't use them. Which segways into your next question...

 

I think more often than not an indicator does NOT help you see something - it prevents you from seeing EVERYTHING. Again, its the looking at the trees and not the forest. I don't know about you but when I have an indicator on my charts my eye is naturally drawn to it and I focus on what the indicator is saying rather than what the picture above it (price) is saying. I think thats why a lot of new traders are setup to fail. The indicators train them to look at the wrong thing (the indicators). And consequently they fall down the rabbit hole of failure for weeks, months, and years before they realize what they should've been focused on was on their charts too all along. They just couldn't see it through the indicators.

 

Thats why I do feel slightly guilty about using any indicator on my charts (value chart). But I use it completely secondary to price and am very conscious of that. If price is telling me something and the indicator isn't, I respect price first and foremost. I am ONLY using it as a confirmation to take profits and get to par.

 

Cheers!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  daedalus said:

 

Thats why I do feel slightly guilty about using any indicator on my charts (value chart). But I use it completely secondary to price and am very conscious of that. If price is telling me something and the indicator isn't, I respect price first and foremost. I am ONLY using it as a confirmation to take profits and get to par.

 

Cheers!

 

Who cares? If I had an indicator that wasn't for show, and ACTUALLY helped me make money in some way, I'd absolutely use it, and have no such compulsions of feeling bad.

 

Let's not forget 'why' we trade the markets. It is not to be able to say that one is cool for not using anything but price, the point is to make money. Sure it's interesting, but would it be interesting if there was no potential for profit?

 

If there is something that you truly find makes you money, it's foolish to feel guilty about it. Wether that be a MACD, or only taking a trade when your cat walks across your trading desk and meows....

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  Dinerotrader said:
I am relatively new to trading and took the advice of many here on TL and I haven't ever used indicators at all on futures, like none at all. I sometimes wonder if I am missing some part of the learning process since so many have used them early on in trading.

 

I was showing my friend a trade I made on the ZS the other day and he likes the idea of bollinger bands so he wanted me to put it on my chart. I did and noticed that it would have kept me in the trade for the entire move if I had used it to confirm when to exit the entry.

Very likely a coincidence but it got me thinking, maybe I am not taking advantage of some useful indicator that would help me navigate when price gets moving lightning speed as it does on the ZS.

 

I also feel a little stupid when others talk about common indicators and I have no educated understanding of them. Do you think there are a select few indicators that everyone should at least become familiar with even if they aren't going to use them?

 

Do you think an indicator can train you to indentify something when you are new? You can always lose the indicator once you develop the eye for it in simple price action.

 

Dinero - I have 1 piece of advice here.... The amount of indicators out there is like pandora's box. Once you open it, you may literally spend the rest of your life trying to find that perfect combination that works each and every time... only to find out that doesn't exist and you're back to where you started.

 

I know the grass looks greener on the other side, I've been there too. Like Thales, I spent more money than I care to think about on the 'holy grail' systems out there. Result was a ton of wasted time and money.

 

Based on your posts in the p/l thread, I think you are making huge progress and that's w/o any indicators! A part of you is saying - yeah, but... imagine if... maybe if .... But I think in the end you'll end up saying - that was a waste of time.

 

So my suggestion is to resist the urge but if you need to try it out, just be prepared for many, many, many hours spent on this. Have you seen all of what is tucked inside OEC trader? And there's so many more that aren't included there.

 

If you want to go this route and test stuff out, here's what I would do - find something that could help with EXITS. As dae mentioned, he's using the value chart to help with timing of exits. As I've said many times here, exits are my crutch and I'm always looking for something to test out. I put the value chart on my charts to see how exits would compare to what I am doing now and we will see... Even now, after all these years, I still have trouble resisting that temptation. And that's what I think a few of us are trying to save you from. So if you want to try something out, throw up the value chart and see how it looks for exits. I have a basic one that I'm using in OEC and I'll put it in the OEC area of the forum if you want to try it out. Just be aware that once you open this box, it's next to impossible to shut it back up. Thales is one of the few that I've seen be able to do that.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I support Brownsfan's view. I am a person who knows most indicators and has written hundreds of them for other users of Sierra Chart. What's more, unlike most who talk as though they understand indicators I think I really have a grip on how they work and what they are doing.

 

I now would only use indicators for one purpose: to summarize information for automation that can be more clearly seen with calm, well trained, unstressed eyes and brain.

 

They can be useful but if you head down the path of wanting to appear knowledgeable about indicators to your friends and actually be knowledgeable then be prepared to use up years of your time. And bollinger bands are such bs. They look great until they don't. I have written and dissected the Value Chart indicator (last week) and can assure you that it has NO magic - its just a comparison of 5 days movement against average bar range and declares every burst of enthusiasm to be oversold or bought. One could make it work for them but you can find plenty of other ways ... so why not KISS. Find an objective reason to exit trades (next S&R or trailing a stop for long holds with a potential trend) and just do it ... the same every time.

 

 

Your goal is to learn a method to be profitable consistent trader (I assume).

 

A private trader has a few edges over the big boys and the super machines. One is that you can buy breakouts (because your size is small so you don't have to scale in to get filled). Another is that you can see support and resistance with training - and that is very hard for a machine.

 

So, put indicators aside. Don't argue about them. Say "I've been lucky enough to be trained by people who read price action and support and resistance alone - and are profitable because of it. So I'm sticking with that and mastering it."

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hiya folks - MK is reporting for duty :yes sir:

 

Pairs near S/R:

EUR/GBP

EUR/USD

EUR/JPY

GBP/CHF

USD/JPY

AUD/USD

AUD/JPY

NZD/USD

 

:D

RED is for Resistance

STEEL BLUE is for Support

:D

 

EUR/GBP

Looking for longs

 

EUR/USD

Looking for shorts, even though it is at the marked R area, I would be more comfortable with another attempt at fridays high into the 1.4950 area.

 

EUR/JPY

Looking for longs. Have been in this range for some time, when we break out of this range it could be extreme. Stay open to the idea of an explosive multi-day move. Play the range on obvious entries.

 

GBP/CHF

Look for shorts. Mirror image to EUR/GBP. Prefer to trade this market if possible.

 

USD/JPY

At immediate support and also testing those lows of early OCT in what I consider to be a weak fashion. Look out for longs. Should support be found here, could really fuel the yen crosses higher - keep that in mind. I don't know why, but I find this pair tough to trade so right now, I'm just using this as extra yen cross analysis.

 

AUD/USD

At resistance. This market has been on a massive tear upwards since March this year. Am hesitant to sell up here as would have expected a more solid decline off the recent 3 thrusts above the OCT high, but instead we are back up at those OCT highs. Probably do nothing here unless something screams at me.

 

AUD/JPY

Tight range all last week. So far has been respecting the R area but not really responding to it. I don't feel very comfortable looking for shorts within this current condition.

 

NZD/USD

Overall, similar to AUD/USD. Huge gain since March this year. The recent multi-day drop has been the largest decline since March in both price and time but it is only down approx 5 cents. I'll look for shorts if something obvious appears.

5aa70f5aed8d9_MK01_16_Nov_2009.png.ffec3ee7a1473e9432e911d2d1146630.png

5aa70f5af3097_MK02_16_Nov_2009.png.b84d9411a244bf9c907ba5dab38f775c.png

5aa70f5b05662_MK03_16_Nov_2009.thumb.png.4e61b55de02f742e76302235453bb223.png

5aa70f5b0bf37_MK04_16_Nov_2009.thumb.png.39e4a7ed8dbb63c57284601d1db10420.png

5aa70f5b127bb_MK05_16_Nov_2009.png.d4a54694d886b210a1100cd1e8fa171c.png

5aa70f5b17f95_MK06_16_Nov_2009.png.8842b68e0011f72be071b8a1a08fac24.png

5aa70f5b1de58_MK07_16_Nov_2009.png.74c021f35ed21f7ede8083d743071b85.png

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Thank you all for your responses. Great points from all. I do see that the ultimate indicator is price and I plan on spending all my chart time developing an eye for reading PA.

 

There is this great trend in the threads I love that during the week posts are all about trades and the weekend addresses some philosophical issues. I can't tell you how much I enjoy this.

 

Thanks again.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi Dinero,

 

When I was a brand new trader and just started my full-time adventure into this business. I focused just on PA exclusively for the first year. As the years passed though, I did find myself exploring many things. Many things have been re-visited and re-explored as well, because you never know how a type of analysis may be different after you have more experience. I'm only bringing this up because, one needs to explore for themselves what suits them and it probably should be re-explored as new experience is added. This all takes time unfortunately. Few traders are able to shortcut this it seems :( If you can believe it, when I first started out and quit my job, I naively thought I'd be profitable within 6 months :shocked: but it's taking a lot longer than that.

 

With kind regards,

MK

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  MidKnight said:
Hi Thales,

 

Japan has GDP news in 40mins, so maybe not much till after then??

 

Just a thought.

 

With kind regards,

MK

 

We usually don''t put any trades on until Tokyo opens unless there is unusual volatility early on. But it is always nice to try to sync up a bit (sort of like doing warm-up laps).

 

And here is another look as it may go the other (either) way.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

5aa70f5b2d54a_TLReading11-15-2009SydneyEURJPY5.thumb.jpg.77a3068a999d29a97a60c5be4e48afb8.jpg

Edited by thalestrader

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  MidKnight said:
Japan has GDP news in 40mins, so maybe not much till after then

 

Believe it or not, except for US NFP, I really do not pay much (if any) attention to pending news. And even for NFP, if an opportunity presents itself with news pending, and the entry is triggered, then I will be in.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
Believe it or not, except for US NFP, I really do not pay much (if any) attention to pending news. And even for NFP, if an opportunity presents itself with news pending, and the entry is triggered, then I will be in.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

 

I hear ya man, I only brought it up because of the apparent lackluster movement within the first hour...I'm not a huge fan of avoiding action due to news either.

 

All my best,

MK

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  thalestrader said:
We usually don''t put any trades on until Tokyo opens unless there is unusual volatility early on. But it is always nice to try to sync up a bit (sort of like doing warm-up laps).

 

And here is another look as it may go the other (either) way.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

 

What is the spread on EJ at the moment?

 

Thanks

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • 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.
    • PM Philip Morris stock, top of range breakout at https://stockconsultant.com/?PM
    • EXC Exelon stock, nice range breakout at https://stockconsultant.com/?EXC
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.