Currency Power Ranking 2006-01-19

January 19, 2006 by Trader Rich 


Rank R.S.

Previous
Rank 

Previous
R.S. 

 Change
 1 CAD 100  6 11.82   +5
 2 CHF 65.14  3 75.19   -1
 3 GBP 58.30  5 53.1  -2
 4 USD 55.01  2 79.53   +2
 5 EUR 45.28  4 67.98  -1
 6 AUD 36.17  7 11.48  -1
 7 JPY 19.04  1 100  -6
 8 NZD 0  8 0  nc


Popularity: 1%

Comments

2 Responses to “Currency Power Ranking 2006-01-19”

  1. Greg Wilson on January 21st, 2006 9:49 am

    There are other indicators I use to help with the timing of my entry and exit, slow stochastics, moving averages, MACD, although decision-making is weighted toward support and resistance areas. I also look at the overall trend (daily, weekly,etc.); then a period of potential swing/intraday up or down movements (support/resistance) with a risk to reward ration of around 3:1 or better. Regarding short in-and-out trades: there are people who are good at it (I guess). However a important factor to consider if you executing many in-and-out trades where risk to reward will always be high (I liked the “action” back then) — you are “paying the house” up front to enter the trade, i.e., the spread between bid and offer, which gets expensive pronto if you’re not right a high percentage of the time. I found demo trading indespensable before and after I jumped into the real thing. I still demo trade to check my emotional control and decision-making skills. 13 1/2% return a week consistently is great, obviously more skill than luck. Many good wishes. :)

  2. Greg Wilson on January 21st, 2006 9:49 am

    There are other indicators I use to help with the timing of my entry and exit, slow stochastics, moving averages, MACD, although decision-making is weighted toward support and resistance areas. I also look at the overall trend (daily, weekly,etc.); then a period of potential swing/intraday up or down movements (support/resistance) with a risk to reward ration of around 3:1 or better. Regarding short in-and-out trades: there are people who are good at it (I guess). However a important factor to consider if you executing many in-and-out trades where risk to reward will always be high (I liked the “action” back then) — you are “paying the house” up front to enter the trade, i.e., the spread between bid and offer, which gets expensive pronto if you’re not right a high percentage of the time. I found demo trading indespensable before and after I jumped into the real thing. I still demo trade to check my emotional control and decision-making skills. 13 1/2% return a week consistently is great, obviously more skill than luck. Many good wishes. :)

  3. Greg Wilson on January 21st, 2006 9:55 am

    Hello Rich. What does the ranking above tell you in your decision-making process? Do you consider it important? Where did you find this info?

  4. Greg Wilson on January 21st, 2006 9:55 am

    Hello Rich. What does the ranking above tell you in your decision-making process? Do you consider it important? Where did you find this info?

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