Bollinger Bands® Trading Strategies

Bollinger bands do not need an introduction to any trader whether novice or professional and whether it is stocks or Forex or any commodities. Bollinger bands find a way to the trading charts of majority of traders even if they are not used as signal generating indicator for many, especially those who are not trading for short-term or scalping or in a market which is moving sideways.

Bollinger Bands

Combining various indicators which can be complementary to each other is always good. It is like team work with complementary skill sets. Let’s try to see can Bollinger bands be used for some good entry signals with the combination of some other technical analysis indicators like Stochastic and ADX.

Bollinger bands tells about the changing volatility of the market and it is important to know about the change in volatility. The change always indicate the possibilities of some major move and we need to catch that up early.

Let’s see how can we use Bollinger bands in some of the following market situations:

1) Widening Bollinger bands: This indicates that the volatility in increasing. It also indicates the possibilities of further move in the ongoing direction. But before taking a trading position we should have a good idea of the current direction.

2) Tightening Bollinger bands: This indicates that the volatility getting less, the market is getting less volatile. d may indicate that a major breakout is on the way. But we need to analyze the direction of that possible breakout.

1A) Widening Bollinger Bands with possibilities of further upward move i.e. bullish:

– The bands are widening with the upper band moving sharply upwards and the lower and moving sharply downwards.
– The price-action is moving upwards above the middle band.
– The recent candle sticks are longer than the previous candlesticks

Checklist and action:
– RSI (Relative Strength Index) is in the range of 30 to 50 and rising.
– You may also check if ADX (Advance Directional Index) is rising towards 25 and/or beyond 25 and +DI line is crossing -DI line upwards.
– Also check if Slow Stochastic is crossing the stochastic signal line upwards.
– With all the above taking place, we can expect a further upward movement. It will better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles to confirm the trend and then take a long (buy) position. There is always a possibility that before a further upward move, a downward correction may take place. The wait of 2 or 3 candles may help in increasing our profits if we can take a position during that correction and market moves as we expected. In case the market does not behave the way we expected and moves opposite, this wait will help in reducing the loss.

If ADX does not move above 25 then the upward move may be limited and hence the profit taking will be limited

1B) Widening Bollinger Bands with the possibilities of further downward move i.e. Bearish:

– The bands are widening with the upper band moving sharply upwards and the lower and moving sharply downwards.
– The price-action is moving downwards below the middle band.
– The recent candle sticks are longer than the previous candlesticks.

Checklist and action:
– RSI (Relative Strength Index) is in the range of 55 to 75 and is falling.
– We may also check if ADX is rising towards 25/beyond 25 and -DI line crossing +DI line upwards.
– Check if Slow Stochastic is crossing the signal line downwards.
– With all the above taking place, we can expect a further downward move. It will be safer and hence better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles for confirmation of the trend before taking a short position. It also happens that before a further downward move there may be some upward correction and the wait of 2 or 3 candles may help in increasing the profits or reducing the losses if we can enter during the correction, as mentioned in point 1-a.

If ADX does not move above 25 (market not trending) then the downward move may be short-lived and hence the profit taking will be also be limited.

2A) Tightening Bollinger bands (Bullish):

The pattern happens with a prolonged sideways move with less volatility (short candlesticks)

Checklist and action:
– Check if there are minimum 2 continuous bullish candlesticks (green) which are longer than previous 2 to 3 candlesticks.
– Relative Strength Index (RSI) is in the range of 30 to 50 and rising.
– You may also check if ADX (Advance Directional Index) is rising towards 25/beyond 25 and +DI crossing -DI upwards.
– Check if Slow Stochastic is crossing the signal line upwards.
– If all above are taking place then we can expect an upward breakout. It will be safer and hence better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles for confirmation before taking a buy position with a red candle.

If ADX does not move above 25 (market not trending) then the upward move may be short-lived and hence the profit taking will also be limited

2B) Tightening Bollinger bands (Bearish):

The pattern happens with an extended sideways move and also with volatility being less (short candlesticks).

Checklist and action:

– Check if there are minimum 2 continuous bearish candlesticks (red) which are longer than previous 2 to 3 candlesticks.
– Relative Strength Index (RSI) is in the range of 40 to 60 and falling.
– You may also check if ADX (Advance Directional Index) is rising towards 25/beyond 25 and -DI crossing +DI upwards.
– Check if Slow Stochastic is crossing the signal line downwards.
– If all above are taking place then we can expect a downward breakout. It will be safer and hence better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles for confirmation before taking a sell position with a red candle.

If ADX does not move above 25 then the upward move may be limited and hence the profit taking will be limited.

3A) Continuation of uptrend after correction during the ongoing trend

Correction always takes place even during strong trends. During an uptrend the price may reverse to the middle band or even towards the lower band.

Checklist and action:
– RSI (Relative Strength Index) is in the range of 30 to 50 and rising.
– We can also check ADX (Advance Directional Index) to see if the ADX is above 25 and +DI line is over -DI line (bullish configuration).
– Whether the Slow Stochastic is over the signal which indicates a bullish configuration.
– With all the above we can expect the continuation of the ongoing uptrend. It is safer and better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles to have a confirmation that the recent opposite move was just a correction and then take a buy position

3B) Continuation of downtrend after correction during the ongoing trend

Correction always takes place even during strong trends. During a downtrend the price may reverse to the middle band or even towards the upper band.

Checklist and action:

– RSI (Relative Strength Index) is in the range of 55 to 75 and falling.
– We can check ADX (Advance Directional Index) to see if the ADX is above 25 and -DI line is above +DI line (bearish configuration).
– Whether the Slow Stochastic is below the signal line which indicates a bearish configuration.
– With all the above we can expect the continuation of the ongoing downtrend. It is safer and better to wait for 2 or 3 more candles to have a confirmation that the recent move in opposite direction was just a correction before taking a short position.

Note: We have mentioned Slow Stochastic. Some traders use normal stochastic, some “slow stochastic” and some “full stochastic”. Normal stochastic oscillator may tend to give too many false signals and full stochastic need a decision as to how slow we want to make it. I generally use either the normal stochastic with default settings or the slow one. Depending on the strength of the trend and market situations we can decide to use full stochastic and the factor as to how much slow we wish to make it.

You may check more details about Bollinger Bands at Forex Trading site ForexAbode.com

 

 

What to Expect From Sony (NYSE: SNE) in 2012

What to Expect From Sony (NYSE: SNE) in 2012

by Jeannette Di Louie, Investment U Research
Tuesday, January 3, 2011

To say that Sony (NYSE: SNE) had a rough 2011 is akin to saying that the Titanic got delayed…

Either way, it’s a major understatement.

Early in November, the Japanese electronics and entertainment conglomerate not only had to report a $346-million loss for the previous quarter, but it also revised its annual earnings forecast downwards to an overwhelmingly depressing $1.2-billion loss for the fiscal year.

Meaning that Sony will have recorded four straight years of negative growth.

That probably seems surprising considering Sony’s impressive corporate history and equally notable product line. Founded in 1946, the company sells laptops – including the swanky VAIO line – televisions, cameras, desktops and gaming consoles.

Yet it can’t seem to catch a break.

Based in Japan, Sony blamed the strong yen along for lower sales – especially in their TV department – and heavy flooding in Thailand on top of the 2011 tsunami, both of which disrupted production.

Those excuses are all well and good, and even valid, but four years in a row isn’t a fluke. It’s a trend… and not a flattering one…

Sony Flops and Failures

In Sony’s defense, TV sales really have been dropping across the board for several years now. Much like the housing market, television sets are currently in a buyers’ market.

Well-established businesses like Panasonic (NYSE: PC) and Toshiba (TYO: 6502) have suffered right alongside Sony as prices just keep falling. As Yahoo! Finance’s Andrew Martin explains, “Even newer and more nimble competitors like Samsung and LG have struggled to make much money on TVs, if any.”

But all the same, Sony’s revenue fell in just about every area of its diversified business, from its Consumer Products and Services division, to its Music, Financial Services and Professional, Device and Solutions departments. In fact, the only thing that did well was Sony Pictures, where revenue increased by an admittedly impressive 17 percent.

Even revenue from Sony Ericsson, which it shares equal ownership with Swedish telecommunications company, Ericsson, fell 1.1 percent. And they sell phones, a market that seems to be all but recession proof these days.

Sure, the larger company didn’t make it onto Yahoo’s highly unflattering “Worst Product Flops of 2011″ list… unlike Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) for its harebrained and short-lived Qwikster, General Motors (NYSE: GM) for its all but un-sellable Volt and Research In Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM) for its disappointing attempt at a tablet with PlayBook.

But that’s hardly very comforting to Sony shareholders, whether loyal or prospective.

Not a Bet Worth Making

With all of that said, Sony does have a few factors in its favor, one of them being the nearly certain fact (or at least as certain as you can get in this crazy business climate) that it isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

It’s here to stay and, even now, its teams are working hard at putting the finishing touches on what could be an exciting, new product lineup due out this year or shortly after.

That includes the PlayStation 4, which it’s currently keeping hush-hush. Investors and gamers alike might get some significant sneak peaks at it at the E3 gamers’ conference in Los Angeles in June, however.

Then there’s the PlayStation Vita, Sony’s latest portable gaming system, which consumers will be able to buy with Wi-Fi or 3G. And that’s not the only portable entertainment system it plans on debuting soon, since it also has high hopes for its upcoming Personal 3D Viewer.

As Business Insider describes it, the Viewer is “a full 3D home theater system… on your head,” all for just $800. Though, of course, that isn’t likely to sell like the electronic version of hotcakes in this poor global economy.

For that matter, there’s no guarantee that the other two products will, either. Not with products priced in the $100s and consumers still so jittery.

Whether that’s Sony’s fault or not doesn’t really matter in the end. Blame it on tough luck, bad management decisions, or some combination of the two.

But no matter who or what deserves the blame, investors should wait to see some signs of life from Sony before investing in them any time soon.

Good Investing,

Jeannette Di Louie

Article by Investment U

Brown’s Gothard Says Euro May Weaken 8% by Mid-2012

Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) — Christopher Gothard, head of foreign exchange at Brown Brothers Harriman (Hong Kong) Ltd., talks about his forecast for the euro.¶ European leaders return to work this week seeking to buy time for the Spanish and Italian governments to wrest control over their debt and rescue the single currency from fragmentation in its 10th anniversary year. Gothard also discusses the yen, pound, Australian dollar and yuan. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

“Stagnation” a Threat to Gold’s Bull Market as Indian Demand Falls 56%, Eurozone Bank Lending “Collapses”

London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Tues 3 Jan., 08:35 EST

WHOLESALE MARKET prices to buy gold rose Tuesday morning as dealers in London – heart of the world’s professional bullion trade – returned from the New Year’s holiday.

Gold recovered almost all of last week’s 5% drop before edging back to $1592 per ounce – a price first reached in July 2011, when investment demand to buy gold jumped amid the worsening Eurozone debt crisis and a looming downgrade to the United States’ credit rating.

Tokyo and Shanghai remained closed Tuesday, but other Asian markets led Europe in rising some 1% on average after new data showed a strong rebound in China’s non-manufacturing output last month.

Base metals rallied together with the Euro currency, which rose back above the $1.30 level first crossed 7 years ago.

Silver bullion prices also rose, gaining more than 10% from last Thursday’s near 12-month low to trade at $28.87 per ounce.

Crude oil held near $100 per barrel, supported by a “risk premium” according to Commerzbank analysts, as the French foreign minister called for Europe to follow the United States in tightening sanctions against Iran over its nuclear development program.

“Gold is still trading on risk appetite, rather than acting as a safe haven,” Reuters quotes Ong Yi Ling at Phillip Futures in Singapore.

“Gold is a unique hedge against the debasement of all fiat currencies,” says Douglas Hepworth at Gresham Investment Management, which holds $1 billion of its $13bn commodities portfolio in gold, speaking to the Financial Times.

“However in a period where you’re not having stagflation but stagnation…it will do badly.”

In the 17-nation Eurozone, “The money multiplier has collapsed,” says Societe Generale’s interest-rate strategy team, pointing to last year’s 46% jump in European Central Bank money holdings compared with just 1.7% growth in private-sector bank loans.

“In other words the ECB is printing money but the transmission to the real economy is extremely weak.”

New debt issuance by Eurozone member states will total €740 billion in 2012 according to Swiss bank UBS – equal to almost 6% of the 331-million citizen region’s gross domestic product.

Speculators in the currency market last week raised their betting against the Euro to record levels, according to data from US regulator the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

The “net long” position of bullish minus bearish bets in US gold futures and options meantime fell back to is lowest level since late 2008, down by 3.5% to the equivalent of 422 tonnes.

Including private investors trading gold futures and options, the speculative net long position has almost halved from its record peak of early August.

The gold price has lost 4.1% since then.

“As a percentage of open interest,” says today’s note from Standard Bank in London, “net speculative length is currently around 21.8%. This is well below last year’s average of 31.8%, indicating a market that is far from overstretched.”

“Since the [gold price] peak on September 9th,” says the latest technical analysis from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta in New York, “we have had lower highs and lower lows, and thus gold has entered a downtrend.

“[But] while the long-term uptrend off the October 2008 low was breached during [last] week, it held on a closing basis on the weekly chart. Trendline support sits at $1538.”

Gold investment holdings in the world’s exchange-traded trust funds crept 0.6% lower in the week ending Dec. 27th, according to analysis from the VM Group here in London, compared with a 2.7% drop in the metal’s price.

Latest data from India – the world’s heaviest consumer of gold, which has no domestic mine output – meantime said Monday that imports of gold bullion fell by 56% year-on-year in the last 3 months of 2011, dropping to 125 tonnes and pulling full-year imports some 8% lower compared with 2010.

“Imports were very bad in October to December,” said Prithviraj Kothari, president of the Bombay Bullion Association, in an interview yesterday.

“People were even selling gold in November” – typically a strong time to buy gold during the Hindu festival of Diwali and then the wedding season which follows – because for some, “it was an investment,” says Kothari, rather than the religious and social necessity more typically associated with India’s world-leading demand.

After raising its key interest rate 13 times since March, the Reserve Bank of India held rates at 8.5% in December, following the worst drop in manufacturing output since March 2009.

Price inflation in consumer goods was last seen falling slightly to 9.3% on the official measure in November.

Adrian Ash
BullionVault

Gold price chart, no delay   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and head of editorial at the UK’s leading financial advisory for private investors, Adrian Ash is head of research at BullionVault – winner of the Queen’s Award for Enterprise Innovation, 2009 and now backed by the World Gold Council market-development and research body – where you can buy gold today vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

(c) BullionVault 2011

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

 

The Stock Market Is Not Physics: Part IV

By Elliott Wave International

The following series is excerpted from two classic issues of Robert Prechter’s Elliott Wave Theorist. Although originally published in 2004, the valuable series has been re-released in the Independent Investor eBook, along with over 100 pages of other reports that challenge conventional economic thinking.

Here is Part IV of the series. Click these links to read Part I, Part II, and Part III. Or you can download your free copy of the Independent Investor eBook here.

Another Example of Rationalization, Ripped from the Headlines
Almost every day brings another example of rationalization in defense of the idea that news moves markets. The stock market rallied for half an hour on the morning of April 20, peaked at 10:00 a.m., and sold off for the rest of the day. Almost every newspaper and wire service claims that the market sold off because “Greenspan told Congress that the nation’s banking system is well prepared to deal with rising rates, which the market interpreted as a new signal the Fed will tighten its policy sooner rather than later.”3 Is this explanation plausible?

Point #1: Greenspan began speaking around 2:30, but the market had already peaked at 10:00.

Point #2: Greenspan said something favorable about the banking system, not unfavorable about rates. A caption in The Wall Street Journal reads, “Greenspan smiles, markets don’t.”4 The real story here is that the market went down despite his upbeat comments, not because of them.

Point #3: Greenspan’s speech was not the only news available. Most of the other news that day was good as well. As the AP reported, profits of corporations were good and “most economists don’t expect the Fed to raise rates at its next meeting.” So if news were causal, then on balance the market should have risen.

Point #4: The Fed’s interest rate changes lag the market’s interest rate changes. Interest rates had moved higher for months. Even if Greenspan had stated (which he didn’t) that the Fed would raise its Federal Funds rate immediately, it would have been no surprise.

Point #5: Greenspan said nothing that people didn’t already know, so while the fact of the speech was news, there was no news in the content of the speech.

Point #6: The simultaneously reported fact that “most economists don’t expect the Fed to raise rates at its next meeting” contradicts the argument for why investors sold stocks. If economists don’t believe it, why should we think that anyone else does?

Point #7: Greenspan did not say that rates would go up.

Point #8: We have no data on the history of stock market movement following mere hints of a possible rates rise, which means no data on which commentators could justifiably base an explanation of the market’s apparent reaction to such a hint, if in fact there was one.

Point #9: There is no evidence that a rise in interest rates makes the stock market go down. In 1992, the Federal Funds rate was 3 percent. In December 1999, it was 5.5 percent. The Dow didn’t go down during that time; it tripled. Rates also rose from the late 1940s to the late 1960s, during almost all of which time there was a huge bull market. Ned Davis Research has done the research and found that in the 22 instances of a single rate hike since 1917, “the Dow was always higher…whether three months, six months, one year or two years later.”5 In other words, if interest rates truly cause market movements, then a rate rise would be bullish. According to Davis, it takes a series of four to six rate increases to hurt the market, and that’s if you allow the supposed negative causality to appear up to twelve months later! So even accepting the bogus claim of causality would mean that investors would have had to read into Greenspan’s optimistic comment on the banking system a whole series of four to six rate rises, after which maybe the market would go down within a year after the final one! (The truth is that rising central-bank rates are usually a function of a strong economy, so many rate increases in a row simply mean that an economic expansion is aging, from which point a contraction eventually emerges naturally. Interest rates, like all other financial prices, are determined by the same society that determines stock prices. It’s all part of the flux within the same system. Changes in interest rates are not an external cause of stock price movements, just as stock price movements are not an external cause of changes in interest rates.)

So why did so many people conclude that Greenspan’s speech made the market go down? They didn’t conclude it from any applicable data; they just made it up. The range of errors required for people to concoct such “analysis” is immense, from an inapplicable chronology to contradictory facts to an utter lack of confirming data to a false underlying theory. Yet it happened; in fact, it happens every day.

Quiz: What does this sentence from the AP article mean? “Worries that interest rates will rise sooner rather than later have distracted investors from profit reports this earnings season.” Answer: It simply means, “The market went down today.” There is no other meaning in all those words.

Had the market instead gone up on April 20, commentators would simply have cited as causes the numerous optimistic statements in Greenspan’s address, i.e., “deflation is no longer an issue,” “pricing power is gradually being restored,” inflation is “reasonably contained,” labor productivity is “still impressive,” etc. There were, in fact, no — zero, none — negative statements about markets, the economy or the monetary climate in his address, which is why commentators — in order to maintain their belief in news causality — had to resort to such an elaborate rationalization to “explain” the day’s price action.

But wait. The market went up the next day, April 21. Let’s see what the explanation was then: Appearing this time before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, Greenspan reiterated that interest rates “must rise at some point” to prevent an outbreak of inflation. But he added that “as yet,” the Fed’s policy of keeping interest rates low “has not fostered an environment in which broadbased inflation pressures appear to be building.” Analysts took that to mean the Fed might not be in such a hurry to raise short-term rates, the opposite of their reaction to his testimony to the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 22, 20046

We read that Greenspan “reiterated” his comments; in other words, he said essentially the same thing as the day before, yet investors “reacted” to the statements differently and did “the opposite” of what they had done the day before.

We know that this argument is false. How do we know? We know because once again we take the time to look at the data. Here is a 10-minute bar graph of the S&P 500 index for April 20 and 21. On it is shown the time that Greenspan was speaking. Observe that the market fell throughout his speech on April 21. It rallied after he was done. So his speech did not make the market close up on the day. It’s no good saying that there was a “delayed positive reaction,” because that’s not what happened the day before, when stocks were falling throughout the speech and for the rest of the day thereafter. Such ex-post-facto rationalization is common but never consistent. The conventional presumption of causality demanded an external force that made the market close up on the day, and, as usual, it manufactured one. An article that put the two days’ events side by side reveals how silly the causal arguments are:

NEW YORK — Stocks ended higher Wednesday despite Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s acknowledgment that short-term interest rates will have to be raised at some point. The gains came a day after stocks had sold off sharply when Greenspan said pricing power was improving for U.S. companies, sparking inflation fears.
USA Today, April 22, 20047

One interviewee stated the (false) conventional premise: “Wall Street was in a less hysterical mood than yesterday with Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan being more expansive in his view of the economy,” i.e., the news changed investors’ mood. The socionomic view is different: People’s mood came first. Greenspan’s words did not make people calm or hysterical; people’s calm or hysterical moods induce them to buy or sell stocks, and then they rationalize why they did. Since there is no difference in the news items on these two days, our explanation makes more sense. It is also a consistent explanation, whereas news excuses are typically contradictory to past excuses and the data.

Those offering external-causality arguments, by the way, include economists and market strategists, people who supposedly spend their professional lives studying the stock market, interest rates and the economy. Yet even they barrel ahead on nothing but limbic impulses, sans data and sans correlation, because it seems to make sense. It does so because most people’s thinking simply defaults to physics when analyzing financial events. But when we take the time to examine the results of applying that model, we find that it is not useful either for predicting or explaining market behavior.

Another interesting aspect of financial rationalization is that in fact there is virtually never any evidence that people actually bought or sold stocks for the reasons cited. The fact that people actually sold stocks on April 20 or bought them on April 21 because of these long chains of causal reasoning is dubious at best. Had you asked investors during the rout why they were buying or selling, would they actually have cited either of these convoluted interest-rate arguments? I doubt it. Most people buy and sell because the social moods in which they participate impel them to buy and sell. A news event, any news event, merely provides a referent to occupy the naive neocortex while pre-rational herding impulses have their way.

This is what’s happening: When news seems to coincide sensibly with market movements, it’s just coincidence, yet people naturally presume a causal relationship. When news doesn’t fit the market, people devise an inventive cause-and-effect structure to make it fit the day’s market action. They do so because they naturally default to the physics model of external cause and effect and are therefore certain that some external action must be causing a market reaction. Their job, as they see it, is simply to identify which external cause is operating at the moment. When commentators cannot find a way to twist news causality to justify market action, the market’s move is often chalked up to “psychology,” which means that, despite the plethora of news and ways to interpret it, no external causality could even be postulated without exposing an overly transparent rationalization. Few proponents of the physics paradigm in finance seem to care that these glaring anomalies exist.

Read again carefully the newspaper excerpt quoted above. If you at some point begin laughing, you’re halfway to becoming a socionomist.

A Model That Cannot Predict Financial Events
Let’s ask another question of our believers in the cause-and-effect physics model of finance. What was the cause in August 1982 of the start of the strongest one-year rally in stocks since 1942-1943? (Was it the bad news of the recession? No, that doesn’t make sense.) What was the cause in early October 1987 of the biggest stock market crash since 1929? (Don’t spend too much time trying to figure this one out. An article from 1999, twelve years later, says, “Scholars still debate the reason why” the stock market crashed that year.8)

Can you imagine physicists endlessly debating the cause of an avalanche and feeling mystified that it happened? Physicists know why avalanches happen because they are using the right model for physics, i.e., physics, incorporating the laws and properties of matter and physical forces. The crash of 1987 mystifies economists because they are using the wrong model for finance, i.e., physics. They are sure that the crash was a reaction, so there must have been an external action to cause it. They can’t find one. Why? Because they are using the wrong model of financial causality.

No External Causality

The model is wrong because it assumes that each element of the social scene is as discrete as billiard balls. But they are not. Here is a pertinent passage from The Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior: When dealing with social events, what is an “external shock”? What is an “outside cause”? Other than the proverbial asteroid striking the earth, which presumably might disrupt the NYSE for a couple of days, or the massive earthquake or destructive hurricane that we repeatedly observe does not affect financial market behavior in any noticeable way, there is in fact, in the social context, no such thing as an outside force or cause. Every “external shock” ever referenced in finance is in fact an internal event. Trends in the stock market, interest rates, the trade balance, government spending, the money supply and economic performance are all ultimately products of collective human mentation. Human minds create these trends and change both them and their apparent interrelationships as well. It is men who change interest rates, trade goods, create earnings and all the rest. All social events, whether a rise in interest rates, a drop in the stock market, or even a war, are the result of collective human mentation. To suggest that such things are outside the social phenomenon under study is to presume that people do not communicate (consciously or otherwise) with each other from one aspect of their social lives to another. This is not only an unproven assumption but an absurd one. All financial events, indeed all social movements, are part and parcel of the interactive flux of human cooperation. All such forces are intimately commingled all the time. Yet to the conventional analyst, each is as detached a cause as a cue stick striking a billiard ball. It is this error that so profoundly undermines the conventional approach.9

The more useful model of social (including financial) causality is socionomics, the theory that aggregated unconscious impulses to herd conform to the Wave Principle, a patterned robust fractal. In this model, social actions are not causes but rather effects of endogenous, formologically determined changes in social mood. To learn more about this new model of finance, see the April and May issues of The Elliott Wave Theorist and the two-volume set, Socionomics.

Many people, by the way, dismiss the Wave Principle as impossible because they think that news and events move the market. We have shown that this notion is highly suspect. I hope that the demonstrations offered in this and the previous issue remove a primary impediment to a serious exploration of the Wave Principle model of financial markets.

A Stone’s Throw
This discussion about the natural tendency of people to apply physics to finance explains why successful traders are so rare and why they are so immensely rewarded for their skills. There is no such thing as a “born trader” because people are born — or learn very early — to respect the laws of physics. This respect is so strong that they apply these laws even in inappropriate situations. Most people who follow the market closely act as if the market is a physical force aimed at their heads. Buying during rallies and selling during declines is akin to ducking when a rock is hurtling toward you. Successful traders learn to do something that almost no one else can do. They sell near the emotional extreme of a rally and buy near the emotional extreme of a decline. The mental discipline that a successful trader shows in buying low and selling high is akin to that of a person who sees a rock thrown at his head and refuses to duck. He thinks, I’m betting that the rock will veer away at the last moment, of its own accord. In this endeavor, he must ignore the laws of physics to which his mind naturally defaults. In the physical world, this would be insane behavior; in finance, it makes him rich. Unfortunately, sometimes the rock does not veer. It hits the trader in the head. All he has to rely upon is percentages. He knows from long study that most of the time, the rock coming at him will veer away, but he also must take the consequences when it doesn’t. The emotional fortitude required to stand in the way of a hurtling stone when you might get hurt is immense, and few people possess it. It is, of course, a great paradox that people who can’t perform this feat get hurt over and over in financial markets and endure a serious stoning, sometimes to death. Many great truths about life are paradoxical, and so is this one.

NOTES:
3 Associated Press, “Possible rate increase sends stocks reeling,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, p. C5. May 21, 2004.
4 The real story here is that the market went down despite his upbeat comments, not because of anything he said.
5 Walker, Tom, “Stocks plunge on Greenspan’s rate-boost hint,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 21, 2004.
6 Walker, Tom, “Greenspan soft-pedals on rates; market rebounds,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, p. F4. April 22, 2004.
7 Shell, Adam, “Greenspan calms jittery investors,” USA Today, April 22, 2004.
8 Walker, Tom, “Identifying sell-off trigger difficult.” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, p. F3. August 6, 1998.
9 See page 325 in The Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior.

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Dollar Index (USDX) Analysis 3/1/11

Dollar Index (USDX) Analysis

Analysis courtesy of the Forex-FX-4X Forex Trading blog.

  • The USDX dollar index is currently testing the 79.69 area which was previous resistance which has become support.  This level held price on the five previous attempts to move lower.
  • The above level is currently aligned with the down sloping range trend line we added last week.
  • The heavily weighted EUR/USD currency pair has broken out of an NR4 inside day to the upside with strong momentum.  This adds an element of bearish weight to the near term USDX outlook, despite the counter trend nature of the move.
  • We will be looking for a sustained break below the current level or a failure with price action confirmation to set directional bias for the following trading sessions.
  • Liquidity should be slowly returning to the market as the week progresses and market participants return following the holiday period.

USDX Daily Chart 2012-03-01

dollarindexpriceaction201201 thumb Dollar Index Update 3/1/12

 

Any information or views found in this post are provided for educational reasons and do not in any way represent investment advice. The article author doesn’t guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this or any other information provided. Forex-FX-4X or the post authors will not accept liability for any losses arising directly, indirectly or because of reliance on any of the trading setups or associated analysis in any way.