Sam_Eder

How to Follow the Market's Rhythm

Education
FX:EURUSD   Euro / U.S. Dollar
Most traders overtrade, for one reason or another. Overtrading is perhaps one of the quickest ways to decimate your account and especially as a retail trader with limited risk capital, the best thing is to only trade when the market is active and offering A+ trades. Efficiency is possible by working smarter, not harder.

The question becomes: how can you identify those instances when it's worth pulling up a chair? When will the market be ripe for participation and when is it better to sit on your hands?

The Market's Rhythm
Some weeks the market is very active, and some weeks (like this week in particular) the market is simply chopping around. There is a rhythm to the market, which is important to understand. All traders probably know by now the usual behavioural traits of the three main money centers in Foreign Exchange:

  • London is usually the trend-setter;
  • New York is the deepest liquidity pool and frequently challenges the London move;
  • Asia is usually the consolidation session.
But sometimes the market is awake and sometimes it seems like it's sleeping. How can you logically forecast when to sit in front of your screens and when to something else with your time?

Let's take this week as an example. This week we've had 3 relatively big pieces of data thus far:
  • UK employment data
  • UK CPI
  • US CPI
You would think that the markets would be pushed around by such items (which usually generate viable NewsFlow Trades) but instead all has gone silent this week. The markets are evidently waiting for something. Bill Lipschutz, founder of Hathersage Capital and Market Wizard, put it this way:

"What is important is to assess what the market is focusing on at the given moment".

By paying attention to any bank sheet or market wrap, it becomes immediately evident what the drivers are for the day or week ahead. This goes one step further than just watching an economic calendar because amongst all the pieces of data, you know which ones will be the main focal points.

In particular, this week the FOMC rates decision and the ECB rates decision take center stage. The markets frequently remain rangebound ahead of such influential decisions and for good reason: if something unexpected comes out of either meeting, it could potentially force a decisive shuffling of positions - meaning large moves. This would make any pre-event risk taking fruitless.

Mindful Inactivity
The key to remaining in touch with the market's rhythm resides in a few important practices:
  • check your macro calendar at the beginning of each day (as a reminder);
  • read up on a few bank sheets over the weekend in order to get a feeling for what will be in focus during the week ahead;
  • read session wraps in order to stay in touch with the day-to-day happenings (ForexLive produces free market wraps for example);
  • take into consideration bank holidays, regular holiday times (August/December).
Mindful inactivity means that you’re acting like an eagle and not like a pigeon. Eagles do not waste energy. They wait for thermal columns and glide seamlessly upwards, carried by the hot rising wind. Thermals appear during morning or early afternoon hours after the sun rises and warms the earth. When a surface grows hot enough, a thermal column rises into the atmosphere. So that's when it's more likely to see eagles flying. They don't appear out of thin air...you know that they are creatures of habit and are attracted by a certain dynamic.

Mindful traders are tuned into the rhythm of the market and listen, read and prepare. If a trend is starting on the back of a meaningful story/development/news item, a significant price change may follow. Hence, waiting for the market to be inspired by something enhances the risk-reward ratio of your trades, and can also positively impact your win rate.

Good Luck!

Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.