In our live Trading Webinars
we often refer to finding out which currencies are the strongest and
which are the weakest. By making that determination we can pair the
currencies so that we have a strong versus a weak or a weak versus a
strong. By doing that we are creating a “trading edge” for ourselves. If
we trade a currency pair in which both currencies are fairly equal in
strength, we give up the edge because either currency can “take control”
since they are of equal strength.
By matching up a strong with a
weak, however, we can have a bit more confidence in knowing the
direction of the likely move. Then, if we match the direction of that
potential move with the direction of the trend on the Daily chart, we
have a clear trading edge.
For example, currently the
USDCHF pair is in a downtrend on the Daily chart. Based on a strong/weak
analysis we see that the USD is weak and the CHF is strong. So selling
that pair in the direction of the Daily trend is a higher probability
trade.
Briefly, here is how I go about doing a strong/weak analysis…
I use a 4 hour chart with a
200 SMA on it. On a sheet of paper, a legal pad or an Excel
spreadsheet, I list the currencies (not the pairs but the currencies themselves) in a vertical column. For example, EUR, USD, CHF, etc.
Now, let’s say the pair in question on the 4 hour chart is the EURUSD. If it is trading above
the 200 SMA that means that the EUR is stronger than the USD at that
point in time. I make a note of that next to the EUR and the USD in the
vertical column…EUR gets an up arrow and the USD gets a down arrow.
Then I go to the next currency and go through the same process. (All in
all I bring up about 25 pairs on the charts each day before the open of the New York session and it takes less than 15 minutes.)
When I am done with the
above process, I tally all the “up arrows ” and “down arrows” for the
EUR against the other currencies and then I can tell where the EUR ranks
strength-wise relative to each of them. For example, if the EUR has 5
up arrows and 2 down arrows and the JPY has 3 up arrows and 4 down
arrows, that means that the EUR, overall, is stronger than the JPY. (It
doesn’t get much more simple than that!) When I have all the currencies
in which I am interested evaluated in this way, I then have an overview
of how they all relate to each other based on strength/weakness.
Next, I match the strongest
with the weakest and go to the charts and look for a technical reason,
such as a break of support or resistance, to enter the trade in the
direction of the trend. A pair that has a strong currency paired against
a weak currency would be a candidate for a buy in a Daily uptrend. On
the other hand, a weak paired against a strong would be a candidate for a
sell in a Daily downtrend.
As far as the pairs that I
personally look at, I run this analysis on all combinations of the
following currencies: USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD, NZD, CHF and CAD.
The process is very basic, straightforward and quite boring…but it works.
As a side benefit, while I am
going through the process of checking the 4 hour chart on each pair, I
really get a sense for what is going on in the market at the time. And
that information serves me well as the trading day progresses.
0 comments:
Post a Comment