Hey all :smart:
there are a lot of great Forex Traders out there using relative strength in their strategies.....quite a few sit at Forex Factory and help traders where and when they can...
I like Steve hopgoods work , Trader 101, Dreamliner , gg53 , FerruFx to mention a few........and also a guy called Hanover (so go look them up when you get time)
Personally I do find a lot of the published strengthmeters & systems these days far to complex and convoluted in their approach and output.......they lose the bigger picture and can confuse all but the most focused and expert Traders in this field .....thats not sour grapes because of my lack of programming prowness .....its just stating the obvious regarding core trading principles .....if you dont understand it....... dont trade it!
anyway - heres a recent comment from Hanover from one of his many big FF strengthmeter Threads .......do the words sound familiar to my responses to people here at my thread ?......
Trading Strengthmeters is a massive subject and each trader needs to find and walk their own path .......I and the guys above just try to be introducers, gatekeepers and guides where we can
have a good weekend 😎
N
Dxxx,
There are a zillion different ways to calculate currency strength, just as there are a zillion indicators that you can use in your trading. You start with a blank canvas, and can build almost any strategy; the sheer number of possibilities can be daunting. For example, which do you think is the best moving average: simple, exponential, triangular, linear weighted, adaptive, sine, volume weighted, DEMA, zero-lag, Hull, Ehlers, Tillson, Jurik, Satchwell, .....? Next, how should you optimally set their parameters? And which timeframe should you best use them on?
As I understand it, it's not the indicators you use that are important; it comes down to how you interpret their plots, and how you integrate the various moving parts into your trading strategy: return, risk, setup, timing of entry, trade management, money management, .......
It took me almost 4 years to figure out how to trade profitably, in a way that I feel comfortable with (but then I expect a lot of folk are smarter than I am. ) In my view, anything that's worthwhile takes time and effort. When I first started out, I thought that the markets could be conquered by math, and that I would simply write an EA that would, over time, deliver profit. I assumed that by testing dozens on different indicators, I'd find those that mapped most neatly into the market cycles, and simply use them as signal generators: when to buy, when to sell, when to cover. Now, some 4 years later, I've come full circle, as my journey has taken me progressively down the path of discretionary trading, but I'm slowly reaching a point where I believe that I can nail some of my concepts down mathematically. Even though many of these are visual abstracts: support and resistance; chart and candle patterns.
Don't get me wrong, there are some contributors here who are strictly quant traders, but their knowledge of statistical math and econophysics is massively greater than mine.
If I ever get time, I might start a thread on how I've put the pieces together for myself. But there is not a lot of incentive to post on forums like these, as not all feedback is positive.
David