I will be posting free accurate price action signals here so watch out

I’m sorry but I wasn’t complaining. I had actually placed this trade before you gave the signal. I am new to this site but not a complete novice to trading. I was simply asking your opinion. You did say to ask questions. I certainly wasn’t trying to undermine you signal. Sorry if you have taken offence

respect the trade, let it do its thing. If you want, break even and get a better rate, but there’s no guarantee you will get one.

[QUOTE=“Horlique2;513629”]

if i were you i will hold onto the trade, what if you exit the trade now and its fall down 100pips in a matter of hours. you can exit it if you dont have the psychological ability to hold onto a trade. am still in the trade likewise others.
a decent rejection have formed on the 4hours at 1.54130 indicating a push downward.[/QUOTE]

Thank you.

[B]i want traders to have confident when executing trades, cos its a recipe for success: i have said that the markets always reward traders who make the right trading decisions, so if your trade decision is right you dont need to panic just stay cool, even if your trade hit in a loss still stay calm cos the market will reward you very bountifully the next trade(s).[/B]

hey brother you did the right the thing by asking a question which i replied accordingly , dont be offended i was just giving you a honest and helpful answer.

Thank you Horlique2

Patience patience patience… like Horlique says. Its pays at the end.

hello guys move to stops to breakeven once price moves 20pips in profits our direction on trade 33

ok guys move stops to breakeven now price is at 16pips : i have a reason for this

hello guys move your stops to breakeven now, the liquidity is very small today friday.

I got in this at 1.5410 because that’s when I woke up. Stops at be now and took some profit already. Nice call.

Very good reading… I must say!

Got stopped out at 25pip profit, overall been a successful week. Thank you Horlique2. Always a pleasure. Hope you all have a lovely weekend and I shall speak to you all on Sunday.

Gain 30pips…Thank you horlique …

you are welcome, have a nice weekend.

yes its was a good week atleast we had just one home run (i bank +100pips on the GBPAud trade 32 and made profits on other trades like the eurusd sell ).

i am in the same trade, but i went in short @ 1.5380 and if it’s still at around the same area when the markets close, i will pull the trigger no matter what.
I don’t like to hold positions over the week-nd if i can help it.

[B]Who is Bruce Kovner?[/B]

New York magazine refers to Bruce Kovner as the most powerful New Yorker you’ve never heard of. Jack D. Schwager writes in Market Wizards that Bruce Kovner may be the world’s largest trader in the interbank currency and future markets. He is the founder of Caxton Associates, a global macro hedge fund with an estimated $14 billion in assets under management – one of the world’s largest hedge funds.

Bruce Kovner struggled to find a direction in his career early in his life. After dropping out of his Ph.D program from Harvard, he took jobs as a political campaign manager, a pianist, and a cab driver before entering the world of commodities trading. He is also intensely secretive, shy, and humble.

[B]His mistakes:[/B]

[B][U]His responds about his mistakes: [/U][/B]October 19, 1987 – the week of the stock market crash. I closed out all my positions on October 19 and 20 because I felt there was something happening in the world that I didn’t understand. The first rule of trading – there are probably many first rules – is don’t get caught in a situation in which you can lose a great deal of money for reasons you don’t understand.

You have to be willing to make mistakes regularly; there is nothing wrong with it. Michael taught me about making your best judgment, being wrong, making your next best judgment, being wrong, making your third best judgment, and then doubling your money.

[B]You are one of the most successful traders in the world. There are only a small number of traders of your caliber. What makes you different from the average guy?[/B]

I’m not sure one can really define why some traders make it, while others do not. For myself, I can think of two important elements. First, I have the ability to imagine configurations of the world different from today and really believe it can happen. I can imagine that soybean prices can double or that the dollar can fall to 100 yen. Second, I stay rational and disciplined under pressure.

[B]When you compare the trainees that made it to the majority that did not, do you find any distinguishing traits?[/B]

They are strong, independent, and contrary in the extreme. They are able to take positions others are unwilling to take. They are disciplined enough to take the right size positions. A greedy trader always blows out. I know some really inspired traders who never managed to keep the money they made. One trader at Commodities Corporation – I don’t want to mention his name – always struck me as a brilliant trader. The ideas he came up with were wonderful; the markets he picked were often the right markets. Intellectually, he knew markets much better than I did, yet I was keeping money, and he was not.

[B]So where was he going wrong?[/B]

Position size. He traded much too big. For every one contract I traded, he traded ten. He would double his money on two different occasions each year, but still end up flat.

[B]On the importance of technical analysis:[/B]

There is a great deal of hype attached to technical analysis by some technicians who claim that it predicts the future. Technical analysis tracks the past; it does not predict the future. You have to use your own intelligence to draw conclusions about what the past activity of some traders may say about the future activity of other traders. For me, technical analysis is like a thermometer. Fundamentalists who say they are not going to pay any attention to the charts are like a doctor who says he’s not going to take a patient’s temperature. But, of course, that would be sheer folly. If you are a responsible participant in the market, you always want to know where the market is – whether it is hot and excitable, or cold and stagnant. You want to know everything you can about the market to give you an edge. Technical analysis reflects the vote of the entire marketplace and, therefore, does pick up unusual behavior. By definition, anything that creates anew chart pattern is something unusual. It is very important for me to study the details of price action to see if I can observe something about how everybody is voting. Studying the charts is absolutely crucial and alerts me to existing disequilibria and potential changes.

[B]On sustainable market moves:[/B]

The Heisenberg principle in physics provides an analogy for the markets. If something is closely observed, the odds are it is going to be altered in the process. If corn is in a tight consolidation and then breaks out the day the Wall Street Journal carries a story about a potential shortage of corn, the odds of the price move being sustained are much smaller. If everybody believes there is no reason for corn to break out, and it suddenly does, the chances that there is an important underlying cause are much greater.

[B]Let’s say you do buy a market on an upside breakout from a consolidation phase, and the price starts to move against you – that is, back into the range. How do you know when to get out? How do you tell the difference between a small pullback and a bad trade?[/B]

Whenever I enter a position, I have a predetermined stop. That is the only way I can sleep. I know where I’m getting out before I get in. The position size on a trade is determined by the stop, and the stop is determined on a technical basis. For example, if the market is in the midst of a trading range, it makes no sense to put your stop within that range, since you are likely to be taken out. I always place my stop beyond some technical barrier.

[B]It would appear that you have reached a size level that impedes your trading performance. Since you have substantial personal funds, did you ever consider just trading your own money and avoiding all the related headaches in managing money?[/B]

Yes, but there are several reasons why I don’t. Although I invest a great deal of my own money in my funds, the portion of my funds that is managed represents a call. I don’t say this to be flippant, since my reputation among my investors is extremely important to me, but a call is a much better position than a symmetrical win/lose position.

[B]Can you talk about your fundamental analysis methodology? How do you determine what the right price for a market should be?[/B]

I assume that the price for a market on any given day is the correct price, then I try to figure out what changes are occurring that will alter that price.One of the jobs of a good trader is the imagine alternative scenarios. I try to form many different mental pictures of what the world should be like and wait for one of them to be confirmed. You keep trying them on one at a time. Inevitably, most of these pictures will turn out to be wrong – that is, only a few elements of the picture may prove correct. But then, all of a sudden, you will find that in one picture, nine out of ten elements click. That scenario then becomes your image of the world reality.

[B]On analyzing current events:[/B]

Forgetting trading for a minute, one of the reasons I am in this business is that I find the analysis of worldwide political and economic events extraordinary fascinating.

[B]The way you describe it, you make the whole process sound like a constant game, rather than work. Do you really look at it that way?[/B]

It doesn’t feel like work, except when you lose – then it feels like work [he laughs]. For me, market analysis is like a tremendous multidimensional chess board. The pleasure of it is purely intellectual. For example, it is trying to figure out the problems the finance minister of New Zealand faces and how he may try to solve them. A lot of people will think that sounds ridiculously exotic. But to me, it isn’t exotic at all. Here is a guy running this tiny country and he has a real set of problems. He has to figure how to cope with Australia, the U.S., and the labor unions that are driving him crazy. My job is to do the puzzle with him and figure out what he is going to decide, and what the consequences of his actions will be that he or the market doesn’t anticipate. That to me, in itself, is tremendous fun.

[B]You talk about both the importance of risk control and the necessity of having the conviction to hold a position. How much risk do you typically take on a trade?[/B]

First of all, I try very hard not to risk more than 1 percent of my portfolio on any single trade. Second, I study the correlation of my trades to reduce my exposure. We do a daily computer analysis to see how correlated our positions are. Through bitter experience, I have learned that a mistake in position correlation is the root of some of the most serious problems in trading. If you have eight highly correlated positions, then you are really trading one position that is eight times as large.

[B]On good trades:[/B]

The general rule is: The less observed, the better the trade.

[B]What advice would you give the novice trader?[/B]

First, I would say that risk management is the most important thing to be well understood. Undertrade, undertrade, undertrade, undertrade is my second piece of advice. Whatever you think your position ought to be, cut it at least in half. My experience with novice traders is that they trade three to five times too big. They are taking 5 to 10 percent risks on a trade when they should be taking 1 to 2 percent risks.

[B]Besides overtrading, what other mistakes do novice traders typically make?[/B]

They personalize the market. A common mistake is to think of the market as a personal nemesis. The market, of course, is totally impersonal; it doesn’t care whether you make money or not. Whenever a trader says, “I wish,” or “I hope,” he is engaging in a destructive way of thinking because it takes attention away from the diagnostic process.

Hmm… interesting gbpusd and nzdusd candles on the daily chart…

[B]TRADING OUTLOOK FOR 29TH JULY TO 2ND AUGUST 2013[/B]

Next week is a very busy week for news traders, and technical traders have to be aware of these economic releases to avoid severe losses.

ok lets have some interesting look at some important pairs as the closed yesterday.


  1. [B]Eurusd:[/B] This pair formed a nice bullish signal outside the resistance zone of 1.31774- 1.32400, and this bullish signal indicate much upward movement to may be

1.34000 the next key resistance point, so watch out.

2)[B]Gbpusd:[/B] This pair formed a spinning top just below the key psychological level 1.54000 so if price open below this 1.54000 level price may move down to atleast

1.53000, but if price open above this level we may see a little upward movement.

  1. [B]AUDusd;[/B] This pair formed a bearish signal at key resistance zone 0.93000-0.93350. so we expect price to move down on sunday open depending where price will

open on that sunday.

4)[B] Gbpaud and euraud;[/B] Not much activity on these pairs but we will watch them closely.

5)nzdusd: This pair formed an indecision candle on friday close indicating a move downward to may 0.80000(a strong psychological point), so we will watch this closely

on sunday open.

  1. [B]Goldusd:[/B] This pairs formed a powerful pin bar close to the resistance point 1348.300 so depending where the markets open on sunday we expect price to kiss the

1348.300 before rocking down.

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have a nice weekend please tell others about this thread so they can benefits too, dont be greedy. lol hahahaha.

I hope you guys love the thread.