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I remember when I was a kid, people still used paper maps. Remember the folded paper map in everyone’s glove compartment? Having to look at it at every stop light? Yes, for those of you under 30 years old, there was such a thing as paper maps and yes, it’s much easier today. As a kid sitting in the back seat, still a few years away from hand held gaming and smart phones, I was a little bored at the time. With the maps, I used to imagine what they would look like if the streets weren’t labeled. Now look at the stock chart below, not all that different.
This is a chart from our Daily Market Overview service that goes out to our members each day, showing the NASDAQ moving from demand to supply and back again. To make chart reading easy in my articles, I label them so that you can learn from them, but well before any labels are on the chart and long before the trades are taken, it’s a blank chart/map with no street signs helping you decide what to do.
1/27/16 – Daily Market Overview
The yellow shaded boxes are the supply and demand levels we found for our members, demand on bottom and supply on top. Without the labels on the stock chart, would you be able to identify those turning points? Let me walk you through so you not only have the map, but also understand how to read charts without labels. In each yellow shaded area price moved away from that level in strong fashion. Price also spent very little time at those levels. These two factors, along with the specific pattern itself, tell us there is a major supply and demand imbalance at those levels. Meaning banks (smart money) are buying and selling at those levels. What about the shaded grey area in the middle? Many will look at that area and think that because of all the trading activity there must be strong supply and demand. Actually, the opposite is true… The fact that so much trading activity took place and in such a big range tells us there can’t be a significant supply and demand imbalance in that area. If there was, price would spend a very short period of time at the level and move away in strong fashion. The price action in the grey area actually tells us that the buy and sell orders in that area are filled, meaning price should move quickly through that area in the future, like it does. So, the opportunity was that we had a strong fresh supply and demand level with a very large profit zone between them (thanks to the price action in the grey area).
It all comes down to understanding that the movement in price in any and all markets is always a function of pure supply and demand. The key is to know what this looks like on a price chart and executing your rule based strategy without thinking and emotion. Another way to say this is to know how to spot key pockets of “unfilled orders” (yellow boxes) on a stock chart. When you can do this, that means you can also spot the profit zones where the orders are “filled” (grey area). Price charts are just another map, evolving from paper to the screens just like the old paper road map and today’s GPS. If you don’t know how to read the map, be careful putting your money at risk because there are very good map readers that will be happy to take your hard earned money.
Hope this was helpful, have a great day.
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Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD accelerates losses, focus is on 1.1800
EUR/USD’s selling pressure is gathering pace now, opening the door to a potential test of the key 1.1800 region sooner rather than later. The pair’s pullback comes on the back of marked gains in the US Dollar following US data releases and the publication of the FOMC Minutes later in the day.
GBP/USD turns negative near 1.3540
GBP/USD reverses its initial upside momentum and is now adding to previous declines, revisiting at the same time the 1.3540 region on Wednesday. Cable’s downtick comes on the back of decent gains in the Greenback and easing UK inflation figures, which seem to have reinforced the case for a BoE rate cut in March.
Gold reclaims $5,000 and above
Gold is back on the front foot on Wednesday, shaking off part of the early week softness and challenging two-day highs just above the key $5,000 mark per troy ounce. The move comes ahead of the FOMC Minutes and is unfolding despite an intense rebound in the US Dollar.
Fed Minutes to shed light on January hold decision amid hawkish rate outlook
The Minutes of the Fed’s January 27-28 monetary policy meeting will be published today. Details of discussions on the decision to leave the policy rate unchanged will be scrutinized by investors.
Mixed UK inflation data no gamechanger for the Bank of England
Food inflation plunged in January, but service sector price pressure is proving stickier. We continue to expect Bank of England rate cuts in March and June. The latest UK inflation read is a mixed bag for the Bank of England, but we doubt it drastically changes the odds of a March rate cut.
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