I actually SOLD USDJPY rather than buy it, so I'm not sure what I was looking at when I made the above forecast. (I tend NOT to paste my charts in my posts anymore since my system is no longer in development, and I'm not inclined to reveal that much information for free.) It says "from a four-hour perspective," but even my four-hour chart was bearish. They only place I see a bullish sentiment now is when I look at the four-day price flow on my daily charts.Given that landfall for EURJPY is also to the north, with the four-hour baseline currently headed south, this pair will also become a candidate for a long position as soon as the four-hour measure reverses direction. The same is true of GBPJPY, USDCHF and USDJPY. In fact, GBPJPY might already be attempting such a move.
In any event, I sold the pair last night shortly after 10:30 PM PST (see the arrow below). That bearish leg of its journey ultimately offered approximately 30 pips of profit, but I only banked about half that much, at which point, the rate began to experience a bit of turbulence, causing me to pocket my gains and go to bed—not to mention that by that time, the four-hour measures had turned bullish...
Oh, I see! After rereading the quoted text above, I recall that LANDFALL was headed north, but the four-hour baseline was headed south. Accordingly, the plan was to buy AFTER the four-hour measure turned north to rejoin the bullish longer-term bias, which it has now done. So only NOW is USDJPY a buy candidate. At the time I sold the pair, selling was still the "proper" thing to do.
My move at this hour (a couple of minutes ago) was to buy EURJPY.
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