I want you to start monitoring the direction and deviation levels of the weekly measures. I think you will probably be able to take advantage of this kind of information to enter positions during optimal days during the week to maximize longer-term (pseudo swing trading type) opportunities.
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(Speaking to myself...)
Let's review the week to help establish what it might be that you will want to be looking for going forward.
Let's divide the four-hour price range into three levels: moderate, intermediate, and extreme deviation. The time to sell AUDJPY was on Thursday when the rate was rejected at 81.35, near a down-sloping four-day baseline, as price breached the intermediate resistance level of the four-hour price range. At Friday's close, your profit would have been more than 80 pips, and price is
still falling.
Similar to the situation with USDJPY, probably the best thing to do at this point is to wait for the rate to climb back up near 81.25, and then sell the pair once again once the hourly-trend lines turn south.
AUDUSD climbed
above a down-sloping four-day baseline on Thursday, and the two- and four-hour baselines began to turn over at the start of Friday
after price had breached the extreme resistance level of the four-hour price range around mid Thursday...time to sell. The eight-hour baseline
also turned over about a half a day (fourteen hours) later. Consequently, this pair is now in the same situation as AUDJPY.
CADJPY: The eight-hour baseline is rolling over right now, but the four-day trend is neutral. Nonetheless, this pair is still a sell (RIGHT NOW) but ONLY as the 10- and 17-minute trend lines are turning south, and ONLY so long as the 2-hour measures remain bearish and the 60-minute measures remain neutral to bearish.
EURAUD is super bullish, but the rate is currently approaching the top of the four-day price range. Hence, you want the hourly baselines to turn south so that you can buy the pair as they turn north again.
I recommend you stay away from EURGBP, though technically it is bearish and a sell between 0.8555 up to 0.8667.
EURJPY is losing downward momentum and price no longer looks all that averse to finding itself above the four-day baseline.
EURUSD: The four-day baseline looks neutral and it is unclear as to whether it might be in the process of turning/reversing north. The same is true of GBPJPY.
GBPUSD turned bullish four days ago, so technically, it is a buy below 1.3803. The highest probability trade, the best-case scenario, would be for the four- and eight-hour trend lines to continue heading south, and then to turn north at the same time, at which point, you'd want to be long any time the 60- and 120-minute baselines are ascending.
The time to sell NZDPY was seven hours before Friday's close, as the hourly baselines rolled over as they bounced off the downward sloping four-day trend line.
On Thursday, NZDUSD tagged the moderate resistance level of the 12-hour price range after breaching the extreme resistance level of the four-hour price range, with the hourly baselines turning over at the start of Friday, and the eight-hour baseline turning over 10 hours later...with all of this happening
above a bearish four-day baseline. So, as was the case with NZDJPY, the time to sell was seven hours before Friday's close.
USDCAD: The bullish four-day trend has lost all momentum and might now be neutral. Nonetheless, the rate was just rejected at the moderate support level of the four-day price range, and even the eight-hour baseline has hooked north along with all the other hourly measures. Consequently, this pair is a buy, but ONLY as the 10- and 17-minute trend lines are turning north, and ONLY so long as the 2-hour measures remain bullish and the 60-minute measures remain neutral to bullish.
USDCHF is in a situation similar to that of USDCAD except that the hourly baselines have yet to hook north and the four-day trend is still bearish. I would rather wait for the four- and eight-hour baselines to turn north and approach the 0.9136 to 0.9162 region, and then turn south again before doing anything with (i.e., selling) this pair.
USDJPY is crazy. I think your best bet would be to try selling it if and only if it climbs back above 110.00. But, you would need to strictly obey the protocol suggested above (i.e., trade in the direction of the slope of the 60- and 120-minute baselines ONLY, and ONLY when the 10- and 17-minute trend lines are headed in that SAME direction).
BUY THE WAY, AT THIS POINT, I WOULD HAVE TO SAY THAT THE SAFEST TAKE-PROFIT TARGET IS THE 17-MINUTE PRICE RANGE AT 0.10% DEVIATION.