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Posts Tagged ‘support’

How to Spread Bet with Technical Analysis - IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LEVELS!

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Technical Analysis is an essential tool if you are going to trade using CFDs or Spread Betting.

The vast majority of professional day traders use technical analysis in some way shape or form during their trading day. They are aware what the important technical levels are for the markets that they trade. some do this work themselves, some rely upon services like FuturesTechs, knowing that we’ve got an 8 year track record of providing this information to the bulk of the UK Pro trading community.

Many newbies to trading struggle with how to “structure” a trade. Hopefully we’ll shed some light on this with today’s blog post.

It’s all about the levels, and that’s what we do here at FuturesTechs each day: We look at the levels that the market may be looking at, where things may change, where the buyers may return after a sell-off, where the sellers may wake up if the market starts to rise. These are commonly known as support and resistance.

Support is the name given to downside levels; prices below here the buyers may have returned previously, or where they may return today. If we fail to hold support levels the bears are obviously dominating; not giving the buyers the chance to defend these key price levels.

Resistance is the name given to price levels above the market where there may be some”action”. Either we’re going to get to these levels and fall over, or the market should see a strong reaction if we break above them.

These levels are quite often something as simple as old highs and lows, however old they are. We have found markets reacting to levels from over 20 years ago. The market has a long memory, and with charts readily available to all and sundry there’s no excuse not to be armed with the important lines in the sand as you head into each trading day.

The best traders in the world react to a bunch of different things to put on their trades: They wait patiently for a piece of news to come out, or for a technical level to break or hold, or for the market to do a certain thing that they’ve been expecting. They wait patiently. Lots of money can be lost doing trades for the sake of it. Boredom or the need to be involved is a dangerous emotion that a trader has to deal with.

There is little point in trading in between technical levels. The levels are created because they are the prices where things changed previously. They are the “action areas”. Why mess around trying to put trades on in “no mans land”? If you want to buy the market, chose a support level and put your buy order at or above there.

If you need somewhere to put a stop order you can again use a technical level.

Here’s an example: We were bearish of the Eurostoxx 50 Futures today despite Friday’s gains. We had a bold resistance level at 2704. Our bold levels are the important ones. So if we’re bearish and the market rallies to a bold resistance we would suggest selling before the level with a stop above it. The high this morning was 2698….

If you had sold at 2690 with a stop ay 2710 (or our next resistance level at 2728, if you want to give it a bit more “breathing space”) you would have got short and never been far offside.

On the same report we have bold supports at 2640 (the overnight gap) then right down at 2467 and 2418.

So this is the bit that isn’t “harry hindsdight”, just in case you want to jump on the idea that I’m writing this after the event: I will look to cover the short trade at 2470, but if we hold 2640 today I would just get out and cover the trade for either a small profit or at worse nothing. I think we need to break 2640 today to give this trade credibility. In other words we are using another bold level (this time a support) to add weight to our trade. If we don’t break below 2640 then maybe the bears aren’t ready to push us lower just now.

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LEVELS.

So If you’re just starting out trading, whether it be with a Spread bet account, or CFD’s, or DMA (Direct market access) I would urge you to make technical analysis part of your daily process, AND TO TRADE THE LEVELS.

Be Careful!

Fed to the rescue… again!!

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Someone should buy Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson a pair of super-hero suits, because they’ve come to the rescue again!

Back in March (the last time were down at these levels) they stepped in to rescue the markets when they were on key Fibonacci support levels… Today I’m going to post the mail I sent out to all of our professional clients and contacts at that time. You may get a feeling of Deja vu reading this:

“Anyone who looks at Dollar/Yen will know that the BoJ intervene at key technical levels. THEY LOOK AT CHARTS.

I mooted something in the Bund report this morning that may have had a few people questioning my sanity; the idea that the Fed are stepping in to hold Equities above key supports.

Let’s look at the evidence: The last big move from the Fed was the 75 bps cut in January, just when the S&P was threatening to shank through 1281.70, the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the March 2003 - October 2007 rally. A BIG LEVEL!

They did the same thing yesterday when we were once again back at these levels.

In terms of the medium term technicals there is a strong argument that many people will be looking for weakness to 1187.50 then 1093 if this level breaks.

The key here isn’t whether this move can or will unfold; it’s the number of people who believe the story, and if intervention means the sell trigger doesn’t come, and a solid base of support is found, then the intervention would be deemed a success.

In the Dow Futures the corresponding KEY support is 11651.

In the NASDAQ it’s 1699″

The NASDAQ has done fine since then and isn’t threatening these key levels but the Dow and S&P dipped below them last week…. and Treasury and Fed stepped in…

More tomorrow. Watch this space.

PS. Follow this link for my latest CNBC appearance. I was making a point about not needing to “pick bottoms”. It could have been any number of charts from the Banking or Building Sectors, really, so no offence to Bradford and Bingley…

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