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Preschool>
Preschool
= Lesson Status ?-
What is Forex?
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Why Trade Forex?
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Who Trades Forex?
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When Can You Trade Forex?
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How Do You Trade Forex?
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Kindergarten>
Kindergarten
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Three Types of Analysis
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Types of Charts
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Elementary>
Elementary
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Grade 1 Support and Resistance Levels
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Grade 2 Japanese Candlesticks
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Grade 3 Fibonacci
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Grade 4 Moving Averages
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Grade 5 Common Chart Indicators
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Middle School>
Middle School
= Lesson Status ?-
Grade 6 Oscillators and Momentum Indicators
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Grade 7 Important Chart Patterns
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Grade 8 Pivot Points
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Summer School>
Summer School
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Elliott Wave Theory
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Harmonic Price Patterns
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High School>
High School
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Grade 9 Trading Divergences
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Grade 10 Market Environment
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Grade 11 Trading Breakouts and Fakeouts
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Grade 12 Fundamental Analysis
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Grade 13 Currency Crosses
- What is a Currency Cross Pair?
- Crosses Present More Trading Opportunities
- Cleaner Trends and Ranges
- Taking Advantage of Interest Rate Differential
- Obscure Crosses
- Planning Around News and Fundamentals
- Creating Synthetic Pairs
- Euro and Yen Crosses
- How to Use Crosses to Trade the Majors
- How Cross Currency Pairs Affect Dollar Pairs
- Summary: Currency Crosses
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Grade 14 Multiple Time Frame Analysis
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Undergraduate>
Undergraduate
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Market Sentiment
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Trading the News
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Carry Trade
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The U.S. Dollar Index
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Intermarket Correlations
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Using Equities to Trade FX
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Country Profiles
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Developing Your Own Trading Plan
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Which Type of Trader Are You?
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Create Your Own Trading System
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Keeping a Trading Journal
- Why Keep a Trade Journal?
- Benefits of Keeping a Journal
- What Should You Record in Your Journal?
- Potential Trading Area
- Entry Trigger
- Position Sizing
- Trade Management Rules
- Trade Retrospective
- Trading Journal Statistics
- Reviewing Your Trading Journal
- Difficulties of Keeping a Trade Journal
- MeetPips.com
- Summary: Keeping a Trade Journal
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Risk Management
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The Number 1 Cause of Death of Forex Traders
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Position Sizing
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Setting Stop Losses
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Scaling In and Out
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Currency Correlations
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Graduation>
Graduation
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Brokers 101
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Forex Trading Scams
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Personality Quizzes
- Which Trading Style is Best for You?
- Which Currencies Should You Trade?
- What is Your Level of Trading Experience?
- Should You Be a Discretionary, Mechanical, or Hybrid Trader?
- What Kind of Mechanical System Suits Your Personality?
- What is Your Attitude towards Risk?
- What Kind of Stop Suits Your Trading Style?
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Graduation Speech
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Long or Short?
Before we explain how to do multiple time frame analysis, we feel that it's necessary to point out why you should actually flip through the different time frames.
After all, isn't it hard enough analyzing just one chart?
You've got a billion indicators on, you've gotta read up on economic news, you've got basketball practice, a Call of Duty session, a hot date at McDonalds...
Well, let's play a game called "Long or Short" to show why you should be paying attention and putting in the extra effort to look at different time frames.
The rules of the game are easy. You look at a chart and you decide whether to go long or short. Easy, right? Okay, ready?
Let's take a look at the 10 minute chart of GBP/USD on July 1, 2010 (7/01/2010) at 8:00 am GMT. We've got the 100 simple moving average on, which appears to be holding as resistance.
With price testing the resistance and forming a doji, it seems like a good time to short right?
We'll take that as a yes.
But dang, look what happens next!
The pair closed above resistance and rose another 200 pips!
Ouch! Oh well, too bad!
What the hell happened? Hmm, let's hop on to the 1-hour chart to see what happened...
If you had been looking at the one hour chart, you would have noticed that the pair was actually at the bottom of the ascending channel.
What's more, a doji had formed right smack on the support line! A clear buy signal!
The ascending channel would have been even clearer on the 4-hour chart.
If you had looked at this chart first, would you still have been so quick to go long when you were trading on the 10-minute chart?
All of the charts were showing the same date and time. They were just different time frames.
Check out another example of multiple time frame analysis in our forums.
Do you see now the importance of looking at multiple time frames?
We used to just trade off the 15-minute charts and that was it.
We could never understand why when everything looked good the market would suddenly stall or reverse. It never crossed our minds to take a look at a larger time frame to see what was happening.
When the market did stall or reverse on the 15-minute chart, it was often because it had hit support or resistance on a larger time frame.
It took a couple hundred negative pips to learn that the larger the time frame, the more likely an important support or resistance levels would hold.
Trading using multiple time frames has probably kept us out of more losing trades than any other one thing alone. It will allow you to stay in a trade longer because you're able to identify where you are relative to the big picture.
Most beginners look at only one time frame. They grab a single time frame, apply their indicators and ignore other time frames.
The problem is that a new trend, coming from another time frame, often hurts traders who don't look at the big picture.
- Multiple Time Frame Analysis
- What Time Frame Should I Trade?
- Time Frame Breakdown
- Long or Short?
- Time Frame Mashup
- Time Frame Combinations
- Summary: Multiple Time Frame Analysis






