Go Back   BabyPips.com Forex Forum > "The Holy Grails" > Free Forex Trading Systems
Free Forex Trading Systems Got the "Holy Grail" system? Want to share it for free and become everyone's hero? This is the place to do it. (No advertisers please!) Also, follow along as our very own Pip Surfer posts daily updates from his Cowabunga System in the Pip My System Forex Blog.

Welcome to the BabyPips.com forum!

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which allows you to view the discussions, but prevents you from contributing. By joining our FREE community you will be able to do all of the following:

  • Post topics & responses to other discussions
  • Communicate privately with other members (PM)
  • Respond to polls
  • Upload content
  • Post comments on our blogs
  • Contribute on our Forexpedia

Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.



View Poll Results: Please feel Free to Rate this System
Made Money 55 69.62%
Lost Money 24 30.38%
Voters: 79. You may not vote on this poll

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1141 (permalink)  
Old 09-04-2008, 06:38 PM
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 5
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by basomakm View Post
Thanks tlindle
1-Do u mean if i'm using 15min chart have to use 1hour chart and so on ... ?
2-I choosed the right IB or not ? i was wrong coz only i go against the trend ?
Well it's tough to say exactly why your trade went bad, but going against the trend could be a big part of it. Here's a real life example where going with the trend saved me some serious dough, happened just a few minutes ago. EUR/USD 15 min. chart.

This chart signals a good entry according to James's system. We've got stochastics coming around below twenty, a perfect IB formed and the following candle has moved up a few pips. Time to go long!



But first, let's check our one hour chart and see what the overall trend is. Hmm, the trend is clearly moving down. According to our rules, we should only go short. Guess we'll stay out of this one.



Great idea! The trend wins, and the price falls RAPIDLY. If you hadn't set a stop-loss and went to the kitchen to make some lunch, you would have been in real trouble!



Hope this makes things more clear. Like I said before, it is certainly possible to trade against the trend. James does it every now and then in his live trades. But, unless you have a real feel for the market it's best to always trade with the trend.
Reply With Quote
  #1142 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 12:58 AM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 12
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by tlindle View Post
Well it's tough to say exactly why your trade went bad, but going against the trend could be a big part of it. Here's a real life example where going with the trend saved me some serious dough, happened just a few minutes ago. EUR/USD 15 min. chart.

........

Excellent tlindle ,very nice explaination
but i have 2 questions

1- after wathcing the 1hour chart , what i have to do ? change the direction to go short , or do nothing (neither sell nor buy)?
2- did u try james's strategy on a real account or just demo ?
Reply With Quote
  #1143 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 05:37 AM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 38
Default

IB method seems interesting, good to slow me down and keep me from rushing into a trade.

In looking at the Stoch. settings, what part exactly is 8,3,3?

Here are settings I have to work with -

d period
k period
overbought (80)
oversold (20)
price c
price h
price l
smoothing type

Thanks,
David
Reply With Quote
  #1144 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 07:17 AM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 38
Default

Also, would the bars in the first white circle (left most circle) have counted as a short? The Green candle was inside the red candle that had long shadows, then the red candle after the green candle was also an IB.

The reason I ask is because the stoch is already trending down, but we are obviously in a "down" trend... I know there is always some subjectivity to this as it is part "art", just trying to understand it all a little better.

Thanks
Attached Images
File Type: jpg IB_15min.jpg (53.6 KB, 80 views)
Reply With Quote
  #1145 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 07:46 AM
Andrewunknown's Avatar
Superior Master Contributor and Member
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: The United States of America
Posts: 548
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pintodave View Post

In looking at the Stoch. settings, what part exactly is 8,3,3?

Here are settings I have to work with -

d period
k period
Hey Dave,
With three variables, it looks like you're using the a full stochastic (rather than fast or slow). As is, "8, 3, 3" is the same as a slow stochastic, which you'll see expressed elsewhere as simply "8, 3".

D% in this case is 8.
K% in this case is 3 (the second one listed).
The middle "3" is a smoothing parameter: this rounds off the faster K% line.
Reply With Quote
  #1146 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 07:55 AM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 38
Default

Here is my "slow stoch", the default parameters are 10,10, smoothing 1. I changed it to the 8,3,3 and I think it looks a little funny so heres another screen
Attached Images
File Type: jpg stoch_setting.jpg (39.6 KB, 74 views)
Reply With Quote
  #1147 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 08:15 AM
Andrewunknown's Avatar
Superior Master Contributor and Member
 

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: The United States of America
Posts: 548
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pintodave View Post
Here is my "slow stoch", the default parameters are 10,10, smoothing 1. I changed it to the 8,3,3 and I think it looks a little funny so heres another screen
10,1,10? What charting package is that?
Reply With Quote
  #1148 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 08:24 AM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 38
Default

I am using ThinkOrSwim, the prophet charts they offer are nice, but I noticed a lag in the quotes so I am using their standard charts. I have a few different stoch choices, but the ones that "look" like the ones I am seeing on here are different than mine numbers-wise...
Reply With Quote
  #1149 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 12:27 PM
james's Avatar
Superior Master Contributor and Member
 

Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London
Posts: 676
Send a message via MSN to james Send a message via Skype™ to james
Default

Knowing the Major's


U.S.

Business Cycle: The U.S. economy is now in the Trough phase of the business cycle, after it experienced a steep decline in the last quarter of 2007 and in the first quarter of 2008. The economy was helped in finding a bottom in the second quarter of 2008 by the rebate checks and the strong exports, but the outlook is not too great either. The economy is expected to crawl into the second half of 2008 and find a decent pace of growth only somewhere later in 2009. In the first months of the contraction phase the global economy seemed resilient to the U.S. slowdown. As things progressed the global slowdown started to be felt by almost every overseas economy, while the U.S. economy had already bottomed. The issues over mortgage lending criteria, introduced in 2002 to stimulate another period of weak housing, has come back in the form of bad debt, but now not just US debt problem. Global Markets bought the US Mortgage debt, not really expecting a slow-down in the US economy. That debt now needs servicing and if the sub-prime U.S. home owners decide that they cannot pay the bill there will be a lot of Inter-Bank re-alignment of those holdings.
Swap Interest Rate: 2.0% is the overnight interest rate after the Fed had cut 325 basis points over a very short period of time. Most analysts agree that the Fed will raise somewhere in 2009, before they look to cut.


Euro Area

Business Cycle: The euro-area economy contracted for the first time in its short history in the second quarter in 2008. However, the ECB officials had called this contraction “technical” citing the strong read in the first quarter, and have affirmed that Q1 and Q2, as Q3 and Q4 should be judged together. Analyst expects growth to pick up somewhere in 2009, lead by the German economy, which is seen as a powerhouse in the area. The Euro-zone has a very diversified economy, that backs the strength of the Euro-zone business cycle. The Euro-zone economy is actually seen by many as the most diverse economy in the world, and therefore is not susceptible to other individual region's economic highs and lows.
Swap Interest Rate: 4.25% is the overnight interest rate, a strong rate that justifies the Bank's objective of assuring price stability over the medium term (seen as 18 months)

U.K.

Business Cycle: Once a shinning economy, but now near the step of a deep recession is the story of the U.K. nation. The U.K. economy has to pass some tough times ahead, as the housing market declines at a very strong pace, the financial system is moving at a sluggish speed and inflation is way above the comfort area. Recently, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said “The U.K. is facing arguably the worst economic crisis for 60 years". The recent business cycles has shown the U.K. economy likes to follow in the footsteps of the U.S., and this is what is happening now. The Service sector and the City of London –the financial headquarters- dominates the UK Business Cycle, while Tourism is the main drivers of economic stability in the region.
Swap Interest Rate: 5.00% is the overnight interest rate; a strong rate that was needed to control inflation, was reduced by 0.25% in December 2007 and April 2008, to respond to the economic downturn.

Australia

Business Cycle: 26 years of uninterrupted growth characterizes the Australian economy. However, some suggest the economy has peaked and is heading toward the Contraction phase as the global slowdown has affected the economy. The housing market, which was renowned in the financial world, had recently slowed down the pace of growth, and consumers seem to be affected by it. The Australian economy is heavily based on commodity exports and the recent selling of the raw material markets can only have a downward effect over the real economy.
Swap Interest Rate: 7.00% is the overnight interest rate that is paid to hold AUD Long, minus the rate of the currency on the other side. The bank recently cut the interest rate by 25 basis points to assure a reasonable growth.

Japan

Business Cycle: Japan has a very interesting and unique history, full of legend and fearless worries. At the same time, the Japanese economy is unique and interesting too, however, not in an encouraging economic way. The Japanese economy has been fighting stagflation (no growth together with inflation) for almost a decade now. Nevertheless, these days the stagflation era is slowly turning into a period of recession with a high degree of inflation. Consumers that are continuously saving and a cultural environment that has no peers could easily characterize the financial landscape. The real economy is not moving anywhere, and the Bank of Japan has its hands tied because the overnight rate is at a dangerously low level.
Swap Interest Rate: 0.50% is the overnight interest rate, the lowest in the world. The central bank and the Finance Ministry have repeatedly said that rates should go up, but until the real economy shows any signs of growth this will not happen. The markets look to go Short the JPY currency Pairs to earn interest. For example: Eur/Jpy trade held Long equates to; buying the Euro Zone Interest Rate of 4.25% and selling the Japanese Rate of 0.5%, a net profit of 3.75%. Welcome to the Carry Trade.

Canada

Business Cycle: The Canadian economy had been expanding well over the course of 2007, however, the Canadian business cycle moved into the Contraction phase at the same time that the U.S. did. U.S. As Canada's biggest trading partner, having the bilateral good trades reaching the equivalent of $1.5 billion a day, the U.S. is an important gauge of potential Canadian strength. Having such a background it is normal that the Canadian economy closely follows the U.S cycles.
Swap Interest Rate: 3.00% is the Overnight Interest Rate after the 0.50% drop in February.

Switzerland

Business Cycle: Switzerland has the biggest financial sector in the world compared with the size of the economy. In fact, the economy is based on the service side, and is renowned for the strength and confidentiality behind the Swiss banks. In the last quarters, the Swiss economy has show it is resilient to the global slowdown, even if banks (one of the countries' biggest industries) suffered huge losses from the credit crunch. The Swiss economy has two unique characteristics: the economy rarely suffers from “boom and bust cycles” and Switzerland has one of the highest costs of living in the world (which is offset by the taxes).
Swap Interest Rate: 2.75% is the overnight interest rate, only higher than the dollar and the yen. The Markets can be Short the CHF currency Pairs to earn interest. For example: A Gbp/Chf trade held Long equates to; buying the U.K. Interest Rate and selling the Swiss Rate, and netting the profit. The Swissy (Usd/Chf) is a strong indicator of intra-day US$ sentiment, it tends to move faster and to be more reactive to US$ changes than any other major pair. The Swiss National Bank is listed on the Swiss Stock Exchange (SNBN symbol)

New Zealand

Business Cycle: New Zealand has just passed the Peak of the business cycle, confirmed by the latest news releases. Inflationary pressures have built to an extremely high rate as imports flood the economy, but recent developments have lead to a reversal of such trend. The economy is largely based on the export of raw materials.
Swap Interest Rate: 8.00% is the overnight interest rate, the highest in the countries with an AAA (investor grade) bond rating. The bank had recently cut the overnight rate 25 basis points, after it held at 8.25% for almost a year.

Good Trading
Reply With Quote
  #1150 (permalink)  
Old 09-05-2008, 01:11 PM
Newbie
 

Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 12
Default

i faced the same problem
decided to sell (GBP/CHF) and the price go up
the trend of 1 hour was down so i go with trend
what's the problem !?
Attached Images
File Type: bmp GBP 15.bmp (1.12 MB, 69 views)
File Type: bmp GBP 1 hour.bmp (1.12 MB, 41 views)
Reply With Quote
Reply



Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:06 AM.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0
"Effort only fully releases its reward after a person refuses to quit."
Napolean Hill