July 29, 2009

What’s Up (or Down) With Gold? New Video

Filed under: Gold, Trading Mentor — Adam Hewison @ 7:48 am

The gold market imploded on Tuesday pushing to its lowest levels in several days.

The downward spiral was enough to trigger a daily “Trade Triangle” which moved us into the neutral camp on this market. Exiting our long gold position based on our “Trade Triangle” signals produced a very small profit or in some cases of break even trade.

So the question is: Is the sharp downward move in gold over?

In my new video I answer that question and share with you some levels I think gold will go to on the downside. I also share with you that we could be setting up for it excellent buying opportunity, if and when our “Trade Triangles” are aligned.

If you have a few minutes I strongly recommend that you take the time to watch this gold video.

Watch the video here.

All the best,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-Creator, MarketClub

July 28, 2009

Why Weekly Charts are so Important in Forex Trading

Filed under: Forex Trading, Trading Mentor — Adam Hewison @ 8:47 am

Transit spatio-temporel (Time & Space Transit)
Creative Commons License photo credit: gilderic

Today I’m going to be looking into why weekly charts are so important in the Forex market.

I will use the EUR/USD as the example and deeply investigate the buy signal we received on this cross on Monday, July 27th. Although it’s too early to tell if this signal will be profitable, it is certainly a signal you must take if you are a disciplined follower of MarketClub’s “Trade Triangle” technology.

You can watch this video with my compliments and there is no registration requirements.

Watch the video here.

All the best,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-Creator, MarketClub

July 27, 2009

Some People Are Wired To Make Us Miserable

Filed under: Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 7:28 am


A most
distinguished traitor

Are some people just wired to be do-gooder extremists and any ideology will do? Insightful Times UK article about how environmentalism is the new communism with the same “you gotta’ break a few eggs to make an omelet” mentality that left about 100 million bodies strewn around the landscape in the great march to utopia.

“My desire to live a free, mundane life is a fundamental cog in our messy, glorious, capitalist democracy. It is built on millions of such small entrenched positions. Red-filtered, my desires are despicable and bourgeois and must be beaten out of me with indoctrination or force. Green-filtered, my small desires are despicable acts of ecological vandalism. My house is a carbon factory. My desire to travel, to own stuff, to eat meat, to procreate, to heat my house, to shower for a really, really long time; all are evil.”

Source: TimesOnLine (UK)

FREE Expert Answers for Your Market Questions

Filed under: Elliott Wave — tradingfives @ 5:32 am


July 24, 2009

Upside Price Targets for the SP500

Filed under: S&P 500, Trading Mentor — Adam Hewison @ 3:27 pm

With the S&P 500 making new highs and as world equity markets following suit, the question becomes how high can we go?

In this short video on the S&P 500, I outline some mathematical upside target zones that I am looking at for this market.

You can watch this video with my compliments and there is no registration requirements. We would love to get your feedback about this video on our trading blog.

Watch the video here.

All the best,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-Creator, MarketClub

Daily Market Updates – Free Video Briefing

Filed under: Stock Market, Technical Analysis, Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 2:45 pm


Dan Gramza

Daily Market Updates – Free Video

This is a painless way to get a video briefing across the market spectrum while you lay back with morning coffee. Dan Garmza gives you insights into particular market conditions, dominant trend, and potential set-ups Gramza covers Stock Indexes, Currencies, Interest Rates, Metals, Energy, and the Agricultural sector. You probably don’t trade all these markets but you should be aware if anything unusual or significant is going on in these markets.

Updated every morning (mostly).

INO Free TV is sponsored by CME Group so you will likely get some promotional emails after you sign up. Not a big deal. Some are even useful but I wanted you to know.

Commodities Signal 12% Rally by End of Year

Filed under: Commodities — tradingfives @ 1:14 pm

By Millie Munshi

HVC Shovel Truck Operation 2006
Creative Commons License photo
credit: Gord McKenna

July 24 (Bloomberg) — Prices for commodities including oil and copper may rally another 12 percent this year, based on a technical analysis of moving averages by Logic Advisors.

The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials climbed above its 50-day moving average today, a “bullish” signal for prices, said William O’Neill, a Logic Advisors partner in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. As the index moves higher than the 50- day average, that momentum will attract more investors to commodities, helping to spur further price gains, he said.

The CRB Index has jumped 26 percent from this year’s low on Feb. 24, as indications emerged that the worst of the global recession has passed and China’s demand for raw materials rose. Oil has surged 51 percent this year, and copper is up 79 percent.

“Commodities are in a bullish mode,” O’Neill said. “We’re seeing more money flow into commodities, particularly industrial commodities, and we’re seeing the gradual erosion of the dollar. These will continue to be driving forces for these prices, along with the evidence that the global economy is bottoming. We’ll see commodities rally 10 to 12 percent by year- end.”

Earlier this year, the CRB pushed past the 50-day moving average on March 17 and rose 6 percent by March 23 before retracing the gain. The index jumped over the 50-day average again on March 31 and surged 21 percent by June 11.

The CRB Index rose 1.8 percent today, the biggest gain in six weeks, to 251.27 in New York. The gauge’s 50-day moving average stood at 248.50.

To contact the reporters on this story: Millie Munshi in New York at mmunshi@bloomberg.net;

July 23, 2009

The Three Phases of a Trader’s Education: Psychology, Money Management, Method

Filed under: Elliott Wave, Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 5:25 pm

By Jeffrey Kennedy

The following is an excerpt from Jeffrey Kennedy’s Trader’s Classroom Collection. Now through August 10, Elliott Wave International is offering a special 45-page Best Of Trader’s Classroom eBook, free.

———–

Aspiring traders typically go through three phases in this order:

Methodology. The first phase is that all-too-familiar quest for the Holy Grail – a trading system that never fails. After spending thousands of dollars on books, seminars and trading systems, the aspiring trader eventually realizes that no such system exists.

Money Management. So, after getting frustrated with wasting time and money, the up-and-coming trader begins to understand the need for money management, risking only a small percentage of a portfolio on a given trade versus too large a bet.

Psychology. The third phase is realizing how important psychology is – not only personal psychology but also the psychology of crowds.

But it would be better to go through these phases in the opposite direction. I actually read of this idea in a magazine a few months ago but, for the life of me, can’t find the article. Even so, with a measly 15 years of experience under my belt and an expensive Ph.D. from S.H.K. University (i.e., School of Hard Knocks), I wholeheartedly agree. Aspiring traders should begin their journey at phase three and work backward.

I believe the first step in becoming a consistently successful trader is to understand how psychology plays out in your own make-up and in the way the crowd reacts to changes in the markets. The reason for this is that a trader must realize that once he or she makes a trade, logic no longer applies. This is because the emotions of fear and greed take precedence – fear of losing money and greed for more money.

Once the aspiring trader understands this psychology, it’s easier to understand why it’s important to have a defined investment methodology and, more importantly, the discipline to follow it. New traders must realize that once they join a crowd, they lose their individuality. Worse yet, crowd psychology impairs their judgment, because crowds are wrong more often than not, typically selling at market bottoms and buying at market tops.

Moving onto phase two, after the aspiring trader understands a bit of psychology, he or she can focus on money management. Money management is an important subject and deserves much more than just a few sentences. Even so, there are two issues that I believe are critical to grasp: (1) risk in terms of individual trades and (2) risk as a percentage of account size.

When sizing up a trading opportunity, the rule-of-thumb I go by is 3:1. That is, if my risk on a given trading opportunity is $500, then the profit objective for that trade should equal $1,500, or more. With regard to risk as a percentage of account size, I’m more than comfortable utilizing the same guidelines that many professional money managers use – 1%-3% of the account per position. If your trading account is $100,000, then you should risk no more than $3,000 on a single position. Following this guideline not only helps to contain losses if one’s trade decision is incorrect, but it also insures longevity. It’s one thing to have a winning quarter; the real trick is to have a winning quarter next year and the year after.

When aspiring traders grasp the importance of psychology and money management, they should then move to phase three – determining their methodology, a defined and unwavering way of examining price action. I principally use the Wave Principle as my methodology. However, wave analysis certainly isn’t the only way to view price action. One can choose candlestick charts, Dow Theory, cycles, etc. My best advice in this realm is that whatever you choose to use, it should be simple. In fact, it should be simple enough to put on the back of a business card, because, like an appliance, the fewer parts it has, the less likely it is to break down.

For more trading lessons from Jeffrey Kennedy, visit Elliott Wave International to download the Best of Trader’s Classroom eBook. It’s free until August 10.
—————————————————
Jeffrey Kennedy is the Chief Commodity Analyst at Elliott Wave International (EWI). With more than 15 years of experience as a technical analyst, he writes and edits Futures Junctures, EWI’s premier commodity forecasting service.

July 22, 2009

14 Free Trading Lessons – Get It Now!

Filed under: Elliott Wave, Trading Mentor, Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 2:48 pm

Our friends over at Elliott Wave International have outdone themselves yet again. EWI has released a brand-new eBook called The Best of Trader’s Classroom, which takes the very best lessons from their popular — and expensive — Trader’s Classroom Collection of eBooks and serves them up in one valuable 45-page report. Best of all, it’s free until August 10. Learn more here.

Some of the most interesting chapters include:

  • Why Emotional Discipline is Key to Success
  • When to Place a Trade
  • How to Use Bar Patterns To Spot Trade Setups
  • How To Calculate Fibonacci Projections
  • The Best Place for High-Opportunity Trade Setups

You’ll find several more fascinating lessons — 14 in all — at the link below.

I highly recommend you give this free report a look – this opportunity is only available until August 10. I suggest you jump at this chance to put these essential trading lessons in your library while they’re free.

Go here to download them now

USD/JPY Analysis (New Video)

Filed under: Forex Trading — tradingfives @ 1:58 pm

USD/JPY CrossA video analysis follow-up to the USDJPY analysis that provided a profitable signal. Adam Hewison goes over how he used Marketclub’s Fibonacci tool to supplement the Trading Triangles. As many of you who trade Forex know Fibonacci ratios come into play on just about every reversal and continuation trade.

Watch the video here.

If you want a Masters Degree, maybe even a PhD. in Fibonacci trading go to this link.

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