Tag: NZD/USD

  • Slow Trader Diary – week 35

    We are open with gold.

    Broker charges for the week were a credit of £9.48.

    Here’s our gold trade:

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    Our target is in the region of 1212. This is in-line with the COT and if the present Up continues it will nicely form a recent Up (or recent trend upwards). However, as we have seen this week, the market remains volatile.

    Of the other trades we considered earlier in the week:

    Silver moved down lower than expected, did not provide price at a level I could determine. So no trade.

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    NZDUSD remains a possibility to go up briefly. But it is presently stable below its low of recent weeks. It may move up soon. However, this is an advanced trade as it is against the big trend and is without a recent Up.

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    GBPUSD, having been quite stable through the initial turmoil of the week, just blew down. It may turn at the 15350 region or continue down to as low as 15190. I’m less convinced of this trade. It has, for now, become choppy which always makes for a difficult read. The COT is still a buy but is weakening, we do not have a recent trend, although the mid trend remains up. Only excellent (daily) price will convince me to take GBPUSD at the moment.

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    EURUSD is approaching our predicted bounce point. However, the COT is about to turn and we are all aware of the volatility presently associated with the EUR. My own thought is that the bounce could happen but it will be short lived. Price may turn down again before the previous high thus establishing a recent Down (or recent down trend).

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    WTI, or crude oil, bounced off its lower stop this week. This move is gently supported by the COT, nothing dramatic for the time being. Too early to decide, but it is on the watch radar now.

    Finally, the S&P and FTSE have moved up slightly, but the roller coaster might not be over yet.

    As I’m away for a few weeks the next diary will be 26th September.

  • Wonderful opportunities

    Difficult times in the trading business for the longer-term investor.

    Wonderful opportunities for short-term swing traders, if we get it right.

    I sat on the side lines as the markets slipped recently. Unable to take advantage of shorts (trading the market to go down) as it all happened so suddenly. The large dips in FX (foreign exchange pairings) occurred, in those I monitor, within a minute.

    There are after shocks, so timing any recovery is interesting. Those that I will consider are:

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    Silver. At some point soon I consider Silver will rally, short term. However, recent Up (or recent trend) is against us so a buy to go up becomes an advanced move, meaning the buy signal needs to be clear.

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    NZDUSD is firmly down on the long trend. The COT is a buy, but we have to be careful with the COT signals when the COT is going against the longer trend; the COT, in this instance, still often works but can be short lived. Having said that, there is a (possible) short term buy opportunity here.

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    I’m looking for a buy in gold at about 1125 price with a good buy signal. Catching the signal with the correct buy: on-market, on-limit or on-stop is key.

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    GBPUSD has been relatively stable over the last few days. A retrace to the 21-day moving average (MA) is worthy of consideration. It may happen quickly, if at all.

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    EUR might strengthen again soon against the USD. Unless I get (daily, or, at a pinch, 4-hour) price action at a support level I will not take this until about the 1120 level.

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    Finally, the S&P 500. This, I find, is possibly the most difficult to judge. With the recent dip the S&P could provide a good gain on a bounce. A buy in the region of 1836, but could go down further to the 1770 region. Good price action, or whatever is your chosen price criteria, is important here.

    Lower trade values and generous stop positions are considerations when volatility is high.

  • JPY does not play well with the COT

    Some good opportunities in the foreign exchange pairings (FX) this week.

    I am more and more concentrating on the FX market rather than the stocks and shares market. Particularly the major currencies. And my real angle is FX that is in association with the USD.

    For instance, GBPUSD, EURUSD, NZDUSD and AUDUSD. Gold and silver, priced against USD, and WTI (light crude oil) as they are all on the COT watch-list.

    This is because, with this selection, I can take advantage of the information from the COT report, providing the ‘C’ of my C.U.P. abbreviation (see ‘how I trade’).

    Is the COT that important? Anything that helps us trade with an advantage is important to my mind; there are enough variables in the market not to take notice of any obvious areas of influence.

    Silver gave a buy signal (retracement to the 21 day moving average) that we caught this week. Don’t chase this however, this signal has gone for the time being – possibly.

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    This buy was supported by the COT, but be careful of the trend:

    Snip20150819_21You may have noted that JPY was not included in my primary watch-list. However, we do trade JPY against other major currencies, but without the support of the COT. We are currently in USDJPY and AUDJPY:

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    In both these trades we bought with the ‘C’ being the big trend only, and not the COT.

    The COT, I find, does not play well with JPY.

  • Slow Trader Diary – week 33

    With USDJPY we are several hundred pounds up this week, and still in (but as I’ve mentioned before we cannot count these until they’re cashed). Small down of £100 with NZDUSD. Small up of £35 with DTE Energy Co. And, IG (our broker) costs for the week of £3.28.

    As an aside, how this affects you (the fund investor) personally will be shown as we move into overall profit. Until then it is pointless. Your initial investment into the fund is guaranteed. Okay, it is sensible to allow a few years for a fund to grow but, like me, with patience, we are all wanting a massive gain.

    This has been an exciting week for me in terms of being comfortable with goals and strategies. I am gradually completing my ‘how I trade’ page which will soon give you the strategies that I use. These strategies will seem simple to the novice trader, but execution takes time, dedication and effort to do properly and consistently.

    I’ve coined the abbreviation CrUP, meaning: Conditional, recent Up and Price. Each part is equally important. Missing any one and we are at a greater risk of getting the trade wrong. Each aspect of CrUP will be covered in detail soon under ‘how I trade’.

    One aspect, however, under Price, that cannot be learned is the method by which we buy or short. We have three choices: on market, on stop or on limit. Again, these will be covered in more detail in my ‘how I trade’ section, but in the mean time I will show you an example from this week. Firstly, the reason it cannot be taught is because it needs instinct, or gut feel.

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    Above is GBPUSD, which I narrowly missed. You may recall that we caught the last swing up of GBPUSD the previous week. Looking at a chart in hindsight makes it seem obvious. To get the trade right, however, takes understanding (instinct) of ‘how to buy’, i.e. on market, on stop or on limit. My buy was on-limit, at the exact lower pin position (the arrow marked ‘buy point’ shows this). However, the spread is a couple of pips (these are points up or down measured by the right hand axis, the spread is the brokers profit and if we don’t allow for it then we don’t get in). In my case I had allowed for the spread, so it was my buy position, my instinct, that was out). Having missed this, the following day provided an equally, arguably better, buy opportunity with a retrace down from the previous days close.

    I appreciate that those not familiar with this form of trading then the explanation is double dutch. However, it is a diary for me as much as for you so you will have to allow me this one.

    I have a couple of other examples from this week where, similarly, the buy was either too ambitious (in the case of GBPUSD) or not ambitious enough – hence the £100 loss in NZDUSD.

    But as I said at the start, noticing this outcome and being able to gain from the experience is what counts for the future. And the future is this week coming with great opportunities looming.

    I mentioned a watchful eye on gold. Both gold and silver have climbed against the long term trend as indicated by the COT report. I’m waiting for a retrace of the price before buying. Also, NZDUSD could be in for a move upwards. Sharpen the instinct!

     

  • Slow Trader Diary – week 31

    Here are our cashed-in trades for week 31: Healthcare Partners Inc + £89, GBP/USD + £687

    IG is our broker, costs for the week were – £25.17

    Lets take a look at GBP/USD.

    Conditional: this is a graphed COT (commitment of traders) report giving us a buy condition.

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    This graph represents several months so gives us the condition only, important as that is. From left to right, the first arrow is against the trend. Therefore we would not take that as a positive buy opportunity. However, the second arrow, and second buy indication, is good as it is with the recent trend. The buy condition should remain if the blue line on the chart continues to descend to a new low.

    The COT report is completed for the previous week on the following Tuesday and is published on Friday. It is therefore about two weeks old by the time we get it. However, it is like the oil tanker analogy where you move the rudder but it takes several miles to turn. Often that is the case with the COT. Even though it is old information it gives us a solid hint at the conditional.

    Once we have the conditional we need a matching recent trend. I’ll talk more on the (elusive) trend in follow up blogs.

    After trend we concentrate on price – in other words a buy signal. Here is our buy signal for GBP/USD this week. The first graph is in daily bars and the second is the same trade from bottom to top but in 4-hour bars. The second chart gives us a different view as to the dynamic of the trade.

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    Moving on. You may have noticed the S&P. Here it is today:

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    Knowing what the S&P is doing is not a trading conditional for individual stocks (or shares in the case of the FTSE). That would be too broad a statement. Interestingly, the movement however of the S&P was more or less mirrored by the stocks on my short list. Even being confident of the future movement of my selected stocks I still missed most of them. ‘How is this possible, B’? I hear you say.

    This is an example of what happened.

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    This is Boeing, We notice by the date that the bottom (blue arrow) coincides with the predicted bottom of the S&P. This pin, at a 50% retrace, is a great buy signal. (Again, we will cover price in more detail in future blogs for those that are interested).

    If we choose to: buy on market, that is buy now at current price – or buy on stop, that is buy at a higher future price – or buy on limit, that is wait and buy at a lower price – is a judgment call. And one, on this occasion, I got wrong. You will notice that the bounce was so hard that after the pin the next days opening price gapped up. Only a buy on market would have worked. I went for buy on limit and missed it. “C’est la vie.”

    This was the same this week for four trades that I set.

    For the coming week we are keeping a sharp eye on gold. The commercials (that is the COT report) are warming up nicely to a buy signal. Beware of the trend however and remember, as well as recent trend, we also need price or more accurately price action. But more on this later.