In the realm of financial speculation there are two simple tenets that, if understood will help with understanding how the financial markets truly work. The first is based on the simple economic principle of supply and demand. It is a fact that in any free market (emphasis on free), price will move away from a level of equilibrium when supply and demand go out of balance. Moreover, the more out of balance this equation becomes, the bigger the price move.

The second tenet, and just as important, is that in this free market environment a transaction can’t occur unless there a two willing parties (the buyer and seller) at an agreed upon price. In other words, there has to be a buyer for every seller, and vice a versa, in order for a transaction to occur. The buyer believes that at his purchase price he is getting a perceived value that he will sell later at a higher price. The counterparty (seller) in this transaction has the opposing view, as she believes that the item is fully valued or expensive and is willing to take the other side of that trade. Ultimately, one of these two market participants will be wrong.

The ladder of the market principles should bring up an important question to anybody who is going to engage in market speculation. Do you know who you are competing against? Put another way, do you know who’s on the other side of your trade? And I don’t mean literally. What I mean to say is, are you trading on the side of the novice or with the institutions?

Another aspect of these dynamics is to understand who you’re competing against. In any competitive field it is important to size up the opponent before we step in to the arena. For instance, in professional Football, teams will look at film of the opponent the week prior to when they will play. The purpose of this exercise is to find the strengths and weaknesses of the adversary in an effort to exploit their deficiencies. Each team has a playbook which is a detailed account of their strategies and, as you can imagine, the information held in this playbook is very secretive for obvious reasons. This information is so guarded that there have been instances in the NFL where the coach of one team has accused another of sending spies into the locker room.

It is no different in trading . The good news is that unlike in competitive athletics, as a trader it’s very easy to acquire the competition’s playbook. How so? We know that most traders learn how to trade by reading books on “conventional Technical analysis.” If you understand where they buy and sell you simply can take the other side of their trades.

The most common of these technical patterns is Support and resistance. If you’ve read their playbook ( books on technical analysis) you know that they will usually place their stop losses above a resistance level, or below a support line. In addition, they are also conditioned to buy the “breakout” above these lines on the chart. Our students are taught to spot these patterns, and, as long as there are supply levels above resistance, and demand levels below support, they will the counter-party to these traders.

Another classic pattern is the double top and bottom formation. These simply look like the letters “M” and “W.” In this pattern, traders looking at this are admonished to wait for the letters to form (so to speak) and either buy on a break above or sell below the pivots. Our students are taught that the lowest risk entries are where prices initially turned. In other words, where the letter is only half formed is where the trade should be taken. Further more, we should be getting paid from those that are entering after the market has rallied or declined.

If you stop and think why the institutions are so profitable, it really shouldn’t be much of a mystery. A trader sitting in a Goldman Sachs trading desk pretty much knows how most novices trade and simply uses them to line the coffers of his firm. So who are you, trading with?

Until next time , I hope everyone has a great week.

Learn to Trade Now


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Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD retains a firm underlying bid, surpassing the 1.1900 mark as the NA session draws to a close on Monday. The pair’s persistent uptrend comes as the US Dollar remains on the defensive, with traders staying cautious ahead of upcoming US NFP prints and CPI data.
 

GBP/USD hits three-day peaks, targets 1.3700

GBP/USD hits three-day peaks, targets 1.3700

GBP/USD is clocking decent gains at the start of the week, advancing to three-day highs near 1.3670 and building on Friday’s solid performance. The better tone in the British Pound comes on the back of the intense sekk-off in the Greenback and despite re-emerging signs of a fresh government crisis in the UK.

USD/JPY bounces off lows, back above 156.00

USD/JPY bounces off lows, back above 156.00

USD/JPY is starting the week markedly on the defensive, sliding back toward the 155.50 area where it has met some decent contention for now. The move lower in spot follows FX intervention chatter after PM S. Takaichi scored a landslide win in Sunday’s election..


Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD gets ready to punch through 0.7100

AUD/USD gets ready to punch through 0.7100

The intense sell-off in the Greenback underpins the solid performance of the Aussie Dollar on Monday, motivating AUD/USD to add to recent gains while challenging the key 0.7100 barrier, or fresh YTD highs, at the same time.
 

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD retains a firm underlying bid, surpassing the 1.1900 mark as the NA session draws to a close on Monday. The pair’s persistent uptrend comes as the US Dollar remains on the defensive, with traders staying cautious ahead of upcoming US NFP prints and CPI data.
 

Gold picks up pace, retargets $5,100

Gold picks up pace, retargets $5,100

Gold gathers fresh steam, challenging daily highs en route to the $5,100 mark per troy ounce in the latter part of Monday’s session. The precious metal finds support from fresh signs of continued buying by the PBoC, while expectations that the Fed could lean more dovish also collaborate with the uptick.

XRP struggles around $1.40 despite institutional inflows

XRP struggles around $1.40 despite institutional inflows

Ripple (XRP) is extending its intraday decline to around $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid growing pressure from the retail market and risk-off sentiment that continues to keep investors on the sidelines.

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

I do not think I would be exaggerating to say that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s snap general election gamble paid off over the weekend – and then some. This secured the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) an unprecedented mandate just three months into her tenure.

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