4 Secrets For Effective Tech Analysis
4 Secrets For Effective Tech Analysis
4 Secrets For Effective Tech Analysis
(01:14):
The first concept is called the extendedness of price action. And this has
many different implications of how you can use this concept. There are
many ways how you can use that. First of all, the most obvious one is that
whenever you see that the price action is very far from your
central moving average, it means the price is very overextended. Some
people may even say that it is oversold or overbought in this case. And the
most obvious use cases that you are trading the price action back to the
moving average. And this is especially helpful in Forex trading because
Forex trading is a mean-reverting market in contrast to stocks, which is
generally considered a trending market in Forex. It is much, much more
common to see the price fluctuate around a mean, and I use the 50-period
moving average. And as an example you can use any moving average, you
can use a shorter-term moving average, like the 20, you can use the 100-
period moving average for a longer-term approach, but if you are going
for somewhere in the middle of the 50, moving average is a good choice.
(02:18):
And what I do in my trading is that I look for scenarios that show me that
the price is very overextended. So it’s very far away from the moving
average. And then I go to a lower timeframe and then I try to find price
patterns and entries, as we will see later that allows you to trade the price
action back to the moving average or very close to the moving average.
And you avoid scenarios where the market is just fluctuating around the
moving average, because obviously then the profit potential when the
price is very close to the moving average is not as high as in situations like
that. There are obviously other use cases. I know traders who use the
moving average as a, as a trend origin. You look for moves away from the
moving average in my trading.
(03:10):
I specialize in trading the price action back to the moving average. What I
do is I look for situations like in here where the price action is very
overextended. It’s very far away from the moving average. It also, hasn’t
been back to the moving average in a long time that can help as a, as a, as
an additional filter. What you want is that you don’t only want to see the
price away from the moving average, but you also want to see a lot of time
between the last touchpoints between the moving average and the price
action. And then you just look for ways to trade it back on the lower
timeframes. And it works exceptionally well. Here are ways how a trader
may use a moving average as a pullback approach. When the market is in
a trending phase, you look for moves away from the moving average like
in here or here or even here or the other traders.
(04:03):
If you use the concept of extendedness, you wait for the price extra to get
very far away from the moving average. You wait for signals that could be
a divergence as we will see later, or other concepts that we will explore as
well in this video. And then you’re just traded back to the moving average.
(05:01):
Indicators are very, very helpful when it comes to objective trend analysis,
many hedge funds, many big algo firms use them because it’s an objective
way to analyze price action. And when it comes to the stochastic, what you
want is an oversold market and contrary to popular belief. When the
stochastic is oversold, it doesn’t mean that the price will automatically go
higher. It means that the market is likely to continue because it is very,
very, very weak. The market is in a very strong downtrend as shown here
by the stochastic and a stochastic can remain – and it often will remain – in
overbought and oversold for a long, long time during strong trending
markets. What you want is that you want to have a cross of the price
action below the moving average. And then you want to see that the
stochastic is entering the oversold area.
(05:55):
And this is then the signal that you are in a strong trend. And as long as
the market is really staying in the oversold area and a stochastic is an
oversold area. You are looking at a very, very strong trend. The market
crossed above the moving average and the stochastic entered the
overbought area. And this is where then the trend accelerated and really
kept going. And I recommend that you get away from this conventional
trading wisdom. Do not use the stochastic to find reversal trades. You look
for trend continuation trades. When the stochastic is oversold, you don’t
look for buying opportunities. You look for selling opportunities with the
trend that is where it’s helpful.
(06:45):
When is this downtrend likely to end? When is this uptrend likely to end?
And we can use another method for that. This is the exact same chart. I
just took off the moving average, and this is still the same area I market
with oversold from the previous picture. And now I add an RSI and we
want to see an RSI divergence. So when is the price action not agreeing
anymore with the indicator? And we have that here, the price action
makes lower lows. The indicator is making higher lows. This is a
divergence. And it means that the price action is not as strong to the
downside anymore. The downtrend is losing momentum. And then shortly
after you can see the stochastic also left the oversold area and started the
uptrend shortly after the stochastic entered the overbought area and
uptrend really accelerated.
(07:42):
And then we have the same here at the other side, the price action is
showing you higher highs. Whereas the RSI is showing lower highs.
Another divergence. It means that the uptrend is losing strength is not as
strong anymore. And then shortly after the market collapses. So how you
can use that as maybe use the stochastic to analyze trends, trends, to find
very, very strong trends. And then you can add the concept of a
divergence within our I, for example, to help you understand and help you
find situations when the trend is losing momentum. So those really, really
nicely compliment each other. And here we have another example. So
here I use the RSI again, and I have drawn here, a center, a level in the 50
period in a 50 level. And what it does is differentiates it separates
the RSI in a bullish and in a bearish area.
(08:40):
So whenever the RSI is above 50, you are technically in a bull market.
When RSI is below 50, you are in a bear market. I also added a moving
average channel to your charts that just help you to visualize the trend a
little bit better. And what you want is that you want to get in as close to
the market, breaking above the moving average and also above the RSI as
possible to find new trend following traits. And if we remember, and if we
remind ourselves of the first concept where we talked about extended
newness, when the market is very close to the moving average, that’s
often when new trends emerge. So this is where we are coming back to
this concept here again. So this is more of a trend following approach.
Whereas if you look for X over overextended markets and traded back to
the moving average, that would be considered more of a reversal
approach.
(09:33):
And so what we want is that we want to get in as close to the moving
average breakout as possible. We need RSI as confirmation. We want to
have the RSI above 50, and then you can use it to stay in your traits as long
as the trend is still valid. And you can see that there are many ways how
you can do that. You can go to the, like in the previous example with the
RSI divergence, or you can try to find a Virgin says to get out of your trend,
following traits, you can wait for the market to dip back into the moving
average you can use at RSI. In general, you look for a cross in the RSI
below 50 to get out of bullish traits. And then the same thing happens to
the downside. You want to get in as close to a bearish or to a moving
average breakout as possible.
(10:20):
Then for new bearish trade, you look for a confirmation. Here is the
market still in, over or not below 50. So you have to wait a little bit longer
as a confirmation tour. And then you’re in a downtrend as long as the
market. And as long as the RSI is below 50 and also below the moving
average channel. So there are many, many ways how you can measure
trends, strengths, and understand trends, trends. So I really would urge
you to find what works well for you. Here’s another approach. I marked
this area here in green. This is the four hour timeframe, and we will go to
a lower timeframe and observed X, this exact period, the green Mark
period on the one hour lower timeframe to get an under other idea of
how you can approach that and pull it back. Trading is generally
considered a very, very good and exact trading approach.
(11:14):
So what you want is that as long as the market on the higher timeframe is
still in the bullish mode, you’re looking for bullish entries and those
happen when the market dips back into, into the moving average channel
and also then move away from what cross back about 50. And it’s
happened multiple times. The market moves into the channel, moves
away from it, moves into the channel and moves away from it into the
channel, moves away into the channel trends, higher into the channel
trades, higher into the channel. It breaks below it, but on the higher
timeframe, remember, we are still in the bullish mode. As long as we see
this area here, the market is still on the higher timeframe in the uptrend.
And then when the market came back above the moving average channel
to uptrend accelerated and is this a very basic, but a very effective to put a
bag approach in a trend following market.
(12:07):
So you go to the higher timeframe like here you look for the bullish
period, RSI above 50 price action above the channel. And then you go
down to the lower timeframe and look for pullback entries, for example,
and this is something that will help you look at Trent trends, strength in a
different way. Number three, deceleration. One of my favorite concepts
that I have learned actually from Moritz in our masterclass and this is
really, really helpful. It has completely changed the way I look at charts
and I would encourage all traders to really get the idea of it. And what we
are doing for that is we are looking for an established trending market.
And then we are looking for candlesticks that show us deceleration. Those
are small candles, inside bar candles, small dojis and pinbars.
(13:02):
But what we want is we want to have small candles that exist after a
strong trending market. And then we look for reverses. There are many, or
they are often smart. There can be often small candles within the trend
like here or here, and they don’t lead to a reversal. Why we’re going to
learn in 0.4 of this video. But in this point, it is first just important to
understand, and that you start looking for those areas. You have a strong
bearish candle, then the market completely dies down and then you have
a strong bullish candle. It shows the reverse or the slow gradual change to
the downside. We have a strong, strong bearish market. This is the largest
bearish market in this whole uptrend. And right after this bearish candle,
we have two doji candles with long wicks. What do they show? They show
a temporary pause in a neutral market.
(13:54):
And most importantly, they show that the market has lost conviction in
the, in the selling pressure in the short side. So it’s time to get out of your
shorts if you’re short and it’s time to go to the lower timeframes and look
for potential long entries. And whenever you see after a strong move that
the market immediately dies down, that is your clue to start looking for
trades into the opposite direction, and you can see the market and
accelerated away from it. We have a to here on the S and P we saw that
just last week, actually the market traded back in this previous support
area. It acted as a resistance. You can see the market came in very, very
strong, and then you have two, three very, very small candles. They show
deceleration and the bullish momentum dies down, and then you can see
this huge bearish drop.
(14:41):
And this is how it looks on the lower timeframes. This is the big level that
came in on a daily timeframe on the lower timeframe. Now, the one hour,
we have a divergence here on the indicator. It shows us here is the
momentum losing strength here, just completely rolling over. And then
you even have a nice pet on here. You have a break and retest pattern on
the lower timeframes. So this is how you would use or how you could use
the deceleration concept with the mighty timeframe approach. We have
the Ozzy yen, which I traded with some of my students in the master class.
The market Rose rallying very, very strongly into the previous resistance
zone. There were two levels on top of each other. The market found
resistance at the first one. You can see when we zoom in, there is a strong
bet, a bullish candle dead then got reversed into a small doji candle, a very
small bearish candor, and then the acceleration to the downside.
(15:37):
This is how it looks. When we zoom in strong bullish candles now fade and
become smaller. This is our deceleration candle. You would go to a lower
timeframe, look for an entry opportunity, but whenever you see that the
market is giving you this deceleration also very far away from the moving
average. So we are in an extended market that is your clue that something
is changing in the market dynamics and that maybe a new training
opportunity is going to present itself. This is how it looks now on a lower
timeframe. So this is the area on a daily timeframe to deceleration it, is it
how, how it looks on the lower timeframe. We can draw a very
nice trendline in here. We see already that the market is rolling over. After
the triple top here, we have lower highs. It breaks. The trendline comes
back into the trendline, gives you a retest, builds.
(16:28):
This flag breaks out of the flag and another trend continuation to the
downside. Every time it is confirmed by the trend rider, histogram, every
breakout is also signaled and confirmed by a red trend rider. And this is
how you can put the pieces together in your puzzle with the price action.
(17:17):
Let’s get to the last key point and the last point, which brings everything
together, really, and it is called, or I called it key level. And instead of taking
trades at random places all over your charts, you let the price action come
to you. And you only take signals and traits at key levels. As we’ve seen in
the last point where we talked about deceleration very, very often, you’ll
see in a trend that a trend temporary temporarily pauses, and you have
small deceleration candlesticks that don’t lead to anything.
(18:16):
And this is very normal. This is normal market behavior, normal market
structure. So you have to further outdoors areas and the best way to filter
out trades that don’t go anywhere or just situations that don’t trigger them
is to only trade signals at important key levels. So here we are on a daily
chart and I was watching this downtrend here for a long, long time. There
were many situations where the trend actually slowed down, but it didn’t
happen anywhere where it made sense. Only here did the reverse entered
the deceleration, make actual sense because it happened at a
previous support or resistance area that turns into support. And also this
is a demand area which started this huge uptrend. So it does make a lot of
sense to have a deceleration here. It makes much, much more sense to
then to have a deceleration here, which happens in the middle of
nowhere.
(19:12):
So this is the best approach that you can use to further out trading
opportunities that are not as a high probability, and you will let the price a
price come to you here. And that example, you have a nicely defined
range with a bottom and a top, and you wait for deceleration at key levels.
Here is a very good support leather. The market came back into the
support lever, a strong bearish candle leads to a deceleration candle,
which shows you the end of the trend here. You would then go after the
story, you’ll get go lower to the, maybe to the one hour to four hour
timeframe. And you look to time your traits, which is what we do in the
master class. Here you have. Then the market is coming back into the
previous resistance level. It is railing very, very strongly strong bullish
Canada, and then it leads to a deceleration candle and as new, huge new
downtrend.
(20:04):
And this is very, very important. It’s such a simple photo. It seems very
simple, but it can completely change the way you look at the charts. He,
again, you draw your levels at previous resistance levels, turning points.
You wait for the price to get there. And then you wait for the market to
show you a deceleration candor. So whenever you see a complete market
shift, strong bullish candle turns immediately into a deceleration neutral
candle that should show you that something is really changing in the
market dynamics. The buyers are not strong anymore, and maybe the
sellers are ready to take over. And then after the story, you just go to the
lower timeframe and you look for patterns or other ways to time your
traits here. We have another example you could use moving to look for
deceleration as well. So when the market shoots back into the moving
average, that is where you look for the rejection candles, or you just let the
market come back to the previous resistance.
(21:00):
And this is really how you can use those four secrets. They integrate very
nicely together. You can see how key levels and deceleration work
together. You can see how overextended us work together. So whenever
you see a deceleration at a level that is very far or happening very far from
the moving average, you’re just traded back to the moving average or you
band, you bet on a move away from the moving average. So you wait for
the market to get back to the moving average and then traded away from
a moving average. And those are all key points that will help you improve
your technical analysis skills, your price action, and your understanding for
charts. Let me know if you liked those types of videos, if that is interesting
for you, make sure to check the link in a description for the master class
and all the courses that we offer. And I look forward to hearing from you. I
read every single comment, even if I can reply to everyone. I am reading
every single comment and I use it as inspiration for next, for my next
videos and also for my podcast. Thank you for watching. And until the
next time.