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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
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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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Putting It All Together
Now that you know how some of the most common chart indicators work, you're ready to get down and dirty with some examples. Better yet, let's combine some of these indicators and see how their trade signals pan out.
In a perfect world, we could take just one of these indicators and trade strictly by what that indicator told us. The problem is that we DON'T live in a perfect world, and each of these indicators has imperfections.
That is why many traders combine different indicators together so that they can "screen" each other. They might have 3 different indicators and they won't trade unless all 3 indicators give them the same signal.
In this first example, we've got the Bollinger bands and the Stochastic on EUR/USD's 4-hour chart. Since the market seems to be ranging or moving sideways, we'd better watch out for the Bollinger bounce.
Check out that those sell signals from the Bollinger bands and the Stochastic. EUR/USD climbed until the top of the band, which usually acts as a resistance level.
At the same time, the Stochastic reached the overbought area, suggesting that the price could drop down soon.
And what happened next?
EUR/USD fell by around 300 pips and you would've made a hefty profit if you took that short trade.
Later on, the price made contact with the bottom of the band, which usually serves as a support level. This means that the pair could bounce up from there. With the Stochastic in the oversold area, it means we should go long.
If you took that trade, you would have gotten around 400 pips! Not bad!
Here's another example, with the RSI and the MACD this time.
When the RSI reached the overbought area and gave a sell signal, the MACD soon followed with a downward crossover, which is also a sell signal. And, as you can see, the price did move downhill from there.
Hooray for our indicators!
Later on, the RSI dipped to the oversold region and gave a buy signal. A few hours after, the MACD made an upward crossover, which is also a buy signal. From there, the price made a steady climb. More pips for us, yipee!
You probably noticed in this example that the RSI gives signals ahead of the MACD. Because of the various properties and magic formulas for the technical indicators, some really do give early signals while others are a bit delayed.
You'll learn more about this in sixth grade.
As you continue your journey as a trader, you will discover which indicators work best for you. We can tell you that we like using MACD, the Stochastic, and RSI, but you might have a different preference.
Every trader out there has tried to find the "magic combination" of indicators that will give them the right signals all the time, but the truth is that there is no such thing.
We urge you to study each indicator on its own until you know the tendencies of how it behaves relative to price movement, and then come up with your own combination that you understand and that fits your trading style.
Later on in the course, we will show you an example of a system that combines different indicators to give you an idea of how they can complement each other.
- Bollinger Bands
- Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)
- Parabolic SAR
- Stochastic
- Relative Strength Index
- Average Directional Index
- Ichimoku Kinko Hyo
- Putting It All Together
- Summary: Common Chart Indicators




