The Secrets to Forex & Miller's Planet (pt.3)You must read the preceding parts first.
This one is a real doozy. Watch your reading comprehension levels go up in realtime.
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"Very, very few people could appreciate the bubble. That's the nature of bubbles – they're mass delusions." - Buffett
Last time we talked about how people who speculate are inherently delusional and are all in the process of losing; usually just money. The only way to 'win at losing' is to survive the delusion game by understanding the players and their psychology; not by guessing if price will be higher or lower in 10 years. When you survive, you are rewarded; all the money from big losers goes to the remaining players at the table. That's the derivatives, near zero-sum market in a nutshell. Sometimes players take their winnings and walk away, sometimes new players join the table. But in the end, 'the bucks are all that matter, everything else is just conversation.' The charts, the econ news, the geopolitical shocks... they only matter insofar as they influence the psychology of the players at the table. This is why you have to align your trading philosophy with player psychology first, and at the same time, reduce your risk presence when you take 'bets' in the market.
Think of 'reducing risk presence' as surviving or holding on and think of 'surviving' as taking a piece of the pie from the losers when they hit zero.
Remember, markets existed long before Adam Smith 'invented' capitalism. The original merchants and traders achieved longterm profitability by two methods: collusion, or by navigating wars, famine, oppression... Things haven't changed as much as you might think.
Chapter 1: The Margin of Psychology
Now, after the 2 parts, you've probably had enough of this distilled pseudo-academic fluff and you're ready for the valuable details.
Too bad chief, here's another fluffy paragraph. Again, get used to losing.
In the last part, I ended it by questioning if disorder can be consistent enough to be orderly. Now, we don't have to assume an orderly interpretation of disorder. It's proven by the presence of profitable traders/investors. The household names like Buffett and Soros. They operated, to a degree, on something investors call a 'margin of safety.'
Which is: 'the intrinsic value versus the current or last price offer.'
This is similar to what I've been presenting all along, only I disregard this Plato-like intrinsic value notion; please refer to my part 2 sectioned 'Emergence of Estimation' and read through 'Fact, Fiction, & Forecast' if you want the full take on this. Using fair value, or the center of price gravity, or more simply: 'resilient value;' especially when we are talking about derivatives and forex, serves as a better frame of mind. Because.. value only exists in the mind in a near zero-sum game. But thanks to psychology, there is some element of order present in the otherwise disorderly markets. You can worry about the ethical issues of big zero-sum money games later, after you can afford to read Das Kapital on your yacht.
Chapter 2: Counting Cost
I have spent a long time trying to find reliable patterns or orderly events in derivative markets. I have used or tested over 3000 indicators, experts, or scripts. So many that my MT4 terminal stopped showing them and I had to start an indicator genocide worthy of a binding UN resolution. Countless all-nighters across both small and large forums evaluating both the popular and wildly unconventional strategies and theories of forex. Books, videos, etc. 4, 5, 6 years and on. The stranger and more contrarian the idea, the more interested I became. More interesting to me than the idea itself was the line of thinking that created the idea in the first place. Why did retail traders think this way? Why did commercial traders think this other way? I was able to both regard and disregard the most qualified, and do the same for the least qualified. It's not a surprising lesson, but you have to go out of your comfort zones and destroy your biases to learn valuable things. Peter Thiel's contrarian thinking runs on this kinda stuff. Think about what has happened in the past several years. Contrarian thinking can turn idiots into geniuses these days.
Chapter 3: Hidden vs Too Close to See
Eventually, I stopped looking for a hidden far-off solution and started looking closer. You ever search your house to find your lost car keys only to later realize it was in your jacket pocket all along? Too poor to have a house, a car, or a jacket? Well, then keep reading.
So I started looking at the in-betweens. What's as close as possible to the decision making agent itself?
The first finding is that charts rarely have clear patterns, but human minds often do. From then on, research became straightforward and fruitful. How do I turn that theory into something that makes money, or at least doesn't lose money? I found the major candidates, the independent variables that create these flashes of order, these predictable events or parameters. It's not perfectly rigid, but its the next best thing in the highly volatile world of forex.
Chapter 4: Executing 66 Orders
First off, it's not as simple as a single mind's biases resulting in huge moves on a chart.
To use a basic military analogy, you have to think in terms of a chain of command. From a few big 'minds' to many small 'minds.' Or, you have to follow the killchain step by step. From psychological origination to execution. Obviously, execution is when the order is filled and liable to p&l. We have lots of charting and analytical tools for market movement and execution. But what is the origination? How do you properly connect them? Can you chart or summarize origination and its 'plane?'
So far I've talked a lot about psychology, but not much about specific biases relevant to forex. Or how a collection of 'psychologies' in the 'real world' might constitute a broader social factor, which, as a unit of analysis, goes on to influence markets in predictable ways. Does a commercial fund have biases? Does a central bank have biases? Does Wall Street have different biases than the City?
Four broad but related questions:
What is psychological origination and why do social factors matter?
Based on the above, how do you setup or build an 'orderly' chart to find that resilient value?
How do you use that knowledge to better manage risk and reduce uncertainty?
And by extension, how exactly does that make you a more profitable trader?
These questions will be fully addressed across the next several parts (maybe 7 or 8 more).
I'm going to skip a deep dive into the first question for now, so you don't get too bogged down on the abstract thinking stuff, and instead mix it a bit with something familiar and more visual in question 2.
For the rest of this article, we gotta talk timeframes and contracts first.
Chapter 5: Murph's Law
Time matters in forex. It matters a lot, and in ways some of you probably have yet to consider. In markets and finance, time shapes the parameters of most contracts. I would use a long analogy from Interstellar and Miller's planet (just watch the movie), but the key here is that: SOME RISK IS NEARLY GUARANTEED (written into the contract) while SOME RISK IS TIED TO SPECULATION ONLY. It's the difference between limited risk that is insured by the past versus unlimited risk that exists only via the future (you can have both as well). Up until now, we have dealt with the second, and not the first. Forex standards and practices (de facto contract rules), give us the first. Let me introduce timeframes, and then return to this so everything connects neatly.
There are many different approaches to categorizing timeframes.
By the common candlebar duration (1h, 4h, D; in other words it's categorized specifically by the 24hr clock); group A ,
or by abstract accumulation (like renko or heatmaps or orderbook data); group B .
Now, the latter is a loose fit for a timeframe concept, it can be discrete and confusing, but you can argue 'realtime' or 'all-time' as a timeframe in itself. I won't be discussing realtime very much, and I strongly recommend you read the disclaimer far below if you are a crypto trader or have access to prime data or level two data in general. IF you are a forex trader that fits into group B, let's say a Renko trader, then you need not worry about the indicators or models I present. However, I've only known one successful Renko trader, and he had custom designed analytics. So good luck with Renko, gentlemen.
I will focus on the group A category of timeframes: OHLC, Henken, line, etc. Everything that follows will be based on those.
Chapter 6: Don't Fail Science Class
The more you think of markets by real life principles, the clearer everything becomes. Which is why I want to explain timeframes by analogy. You could argue that markets share some basic similarities, at least from a layman's impression, to classical and quantum mechanics. The smaller the timeframe, the more random and chaotic they appear. And vice-versa. The center of price gravity at higher timeframes is more resilient to chaotic bits of new information. It's more certain . To use Bohm's term, you could argue its 'enfolding' or 'enfolded.' That while the general state of things is a chaotic flowing river, whirlpools with a set of persistent parameters can still exist in those rivers. All this really means is that different timeframes/sessions/days require different indicators and/or applications of those indicators. In addition, a full risk management approach takes into account the pairs/currencies chosen as well since their behavior may vary (choosing the river), and the nature of the contract itself (does it have a waterfall or extend forever?).
Simple summary: some things are more certain at long-term timeframes and some things are more uncertain at short-term timeframes . Most of you will already know this.
Chapter 7: Slaves to the Timezones
When I'm talking about short-term timeframes and long-term timeframes, I mean intra-day versus weekly or monthly. Technically you could trade something like the 4h or daily within a single day. (but to avoid confusion, I want to focus on timeframes as the periods from which you open and close positions, not the duration of the candlebar).
In other words, opening and closing positions within the 24 hour period (from open to market close). Versus. Positions held across multiple days/weeks.
This is very important because they are effectively different types of market contracts because of the risk of rollover. (unless you have an Islamic account)
In general: IF YOU ARE HOLDING POSITIONS ACROSS MULTIPLE WEEKS, you need to have either a genius technical or fundamental system OR, you need to be designing your trades with carry conditions in mind. 99% of you will fit the latter. Inevitably, this means your long term risk management must be quite different than short term risk management; particularly in the weighting of seasonality models and interest rates. I'll explain this stuff in the next article, but for now, make a selection:
Imagine owning a stock that pays you a dividend (😏), now imagine owning a stock that pays no dividend (😴), and now imagine owning a stock where you pay the company a dividend (😂).
Keep your "obvious" selection in mind, because it's gonna upset retail paradigms when I tell you why you're trading the wrong pairs on the wrong timeframes.
See you next time.
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DISCLAIMER:
Now, I should've mentioned this earlier but IF you are a cryptocurrency trader, and some of you reading this may very well be, let this be clear: I did not design these articles for your consumption. Though crypto is arguably a currency, it's core mechanics are different, as is the psychology of the players involved and the market structure. The legal, tax, and broader financial components vary (the nature of the contracts, the timezone/session influences). Indeed, regulation is the main fundamental in cryptocurrency right now, making it a market potentially susceptible to a near-total collapse (at least for blocks of investors) depending on the providence of your broker or income tax obligations.
Timeframes
BTCUSD Mark UpI feel like I haven't viewed Bitcoin in awhile. However, these are my areas of interest which I'll track for the time being. Things can change as price move forward but BTC emerged from my HTFZ (8783.3) and now approaching a new level (9640 - 9700). If the new level is respected then that means a short opportunity should present itself, and if engulfed then I would wait for price to end up on the opposite side. We shall see.
Euro Dollar / US Dollar Mark UpEU was making classic LHs & LLs on the Daily chart which led price right into a HTFZ (1.0820 - 1.1016) where price not only reversed but broke out of a bull channel. Although I'm bullish I would like to see price dip back down around the 1.0991 - 1.1035 levels before a strong rally happens.
Since EURUSD engulfed a zone on Friday's closing candle I would look to see if Sunday's open start above the 1.1163. If so, I would look for price to retest that level before going long. I also would reference the previous LHs for areas of take profits instead of trading price to the next level which starts at the 1.1736 point. We shall see.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!
British Pound / US Dollar Mark UpGU's price is approaching a HTFZ (1.3000 - 1.3170) while in a bear channel along with bullish momentum from LTFZs and off a PPZ. If the barrier is respected then I would be bearish for the upcoming week(s).
I try not to base my analysis off of any indicators, but I will say that I noticed the RSI divergence being shown on the 4H chart as far as price is printing HHs & HLs while the RSI is showing LHs & LLs.
What I would look to do is short GBPUSD right before price reaches the next 'fresh' subsequent level (1.2195 - 1.2330) which is also a HTFZ. The 1.2400 price would more than likely be my TP which is right above a HTF diagonal support. However, since it's a nice way down I would scale price instead of riding it completely to the next zone.
If price happens to breach & ultimately engulf my barrier then I'll patiently wait to react on the opposite side. That also will give me clues to the bias possibly changing too. We shall see.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!
Dollar Index Mark UpI'm usually Neutral since I look to go with the flow of price. However, I am bearish with the DXY considering that it's repelled from my HTFZ, dropped below a PPZ, broke diagonal support and correlation through multiple time frames. My next barrier is between $95-$96 so I'll continue to track price and update as everything unfolds. We shall see.
NEVER TRADING ADVICE!
GBPUSD Mark UpThis is my British Pound/US Dollar mark up, at times I leave engulfed levels on my charts as reference points. However, price not only blew through a HTFZ but even my HTF diagonal resistance, but price is also approaching a huge barrier beginning at the 1.3000 level. I'm always Neutral.
P.S. Do you see the pattern?
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!!
BTCUSD Mark UpDateFrom September 24, 2019 'til now bitcoin's price has been ranging within a HTFZ ($7435-$8783). The swing low of the move ($7793) took multiple hits which gave price momentum to start printing HHs & HLs. Price action was able to form a new untouched zone ($8188-$8182) which should give the highest probability trade. However, there's barriers waiting to stall price on it's way up.
If price dips in the zone, I would long it from $8282 to $8783 which is the starting point of the HTFZ. If price can break above the $8783 level then I would look to enter again on a retest to ride it to the next barrier which is $9531.
If price were to engulf the zone ($8188-$8182) I would wait for a B.A.R to short it to the swing low ($7793). It's imperative to be flexible.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!!
GBPAUD Mark UpThe full extent of the move is 83+ pips and to the 50% PRZ it's 41+ pips. For my standards, both are great amounts, but I'm doing my due diligence at keeping my greed in check. However, I would "eat chunks" out of the move by scaling in on price. If it don't reach the zone and it continues to tank then I'll adjust my approach. I would wait for a B.A.R to execute from the swing low of the move. We shall see.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!!
GBPUSD Mark UpThese are my levels I'll track for this trading week for GBPUSD. I'll adjust as price unfolds, but I would look for price to break down pass the PPZ, funnel through the channel 'til it reaches that support at the 1.2265 level. Breakout traders will more than likely enter a short position once price breaks the 1.2265 level, but they'll be selling right into a zone where there's willing buyers. However, even though a smaller zone formed within the HTF zone that doesn't mean it'll hold since the zone technically has been hit previously. We shall see.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!!
BTCUSD MarkUpLooking at Bitcoin's current price action I would look to short when price reaches between 10328 - 10355. The long wick that touched the 10400 level hit an OB higher up then price formed an OB right underneath. I would take that short to 10146.
P.S. All blue lines (except for the one right above current price) are engulfed OBs. Left 'em up for reference.
NOT TRADING ADVICE!!!
BTC End of Accumulation? Target 16.2kWe are clearly in an huge accumulation phase right now after the run up to nearly 14k, is it over that is the question? 12.3k is my first large profit taking region, accumulation might be over but you never know for sure, the market doesn't care about what you think will happen so always take profits. The solid lines are untested levels where rejection will occur to some degree and the dashed lines are tested levels where price can go right through. Red are daily levels, blue are weekly and white are monthly. My entry was on the weekly level 9.4k and stop loss below the daily at 9k. Price has rejected nicely off the weekly at 9.4k a weekly rejection will target a weekly level, but the large resistance could stop us again. In past bull markets accumulation has lasted 4 months. Trade at your own risk!