How to Spot and Profit From  Market Reversal Signals  How to Spot and Profit From Market Reversal Signals

The trend is your friend (until it bends at the end)“…

Have you ever heard that old piece of trading wisdom?

It’s a bit tongue-in-cheek I know.

And I’m not knocking the popular trend-following advice handed down by wiser traders than me. But isn’t it a thrill when you nail a reversal point in the market and watch the others scrambling for cover?

It’s like the trading equivalent of smacking a golf ball 330 yards dead-straight, over the lake and onto the green…

You know it can’t happen every day. But when conditions allow, and you do hit the sweet-spot just right, it can keep you grinning for the rest of the week.

And hey, it’s certainly not a practice to be taken lightly…

You don’t want to make a habit of trading against the trend unless you’ve got a really good reason.

So what are the signs that can tell you the market is due for a change?

I thought I’d share an old technique with you today.

This really is one of the first bits of technical analysis I ever used. I think I got the bones of it from one of Alexander Elder’s books and mixed in my own candlestick patterns.

I’ve got an old hard drive at home with screenshots of my very first trades on it. I’ll have a dip into it now and then. It does you good sometimes to take stock of where you’ve come from. And the moving average envelopes we’re about to look at are all over my old charts.

(Some of my goofy notes make me cringe a bit – we all have to go through the learning curve, right? – but the analysis was pretty solid!)

Have a look at what I’m about to show you and keep in mind the three main ways I think it can help your trading:

a) If you’re an aggressive end-of-day trader you can use this to find entry points for counter-trend swing trades.

b) If you’re a trend-following end-of-day trader you can use this as an early exit signal. It can show you the current trend may be due for a correction.

c) If you’re short term trader – a day trader or a scalper – you can use this to set the directional bias for your day ahead. You could even use it to build yourself a low risk position during the day and then let your trade run-on for a day or two.

So as I mentioned, this is all about using moving average envelopes. And if you’ve not seen them before, they’re very simple to use. Every decent charting package has them as a standard feature…

They’re simply two additional lines drawn above and below the moving average (MA) itself. And they’re plotted by adding and subtracting a fixed percentage of the instrument’s price from the MA.

The key is to use a percentage value that contains at least 95% of the price action. Each Forex pair will be different and you only need a visual scan over the chart to see when you’ve got it right. It’s not an exact science.

Here’s GBP/USD as an example:

envelope1

GBPUSD Daily Chart

You can use a 22-period moving average to good effect on the daily chart (the red line on the above chart). And in this case a 2.2% upper and lower envelope – the blue bands – contained at least 95% of the price action.

This now gives you a visual channel to help you gauge when strong moves are overextended. When you see the market out there at one of the blue lines you know you can start looking for a short-term reversal (or at least expect a pause in the current trend).

Here’s a simple three-step process to help you highlight the high-probability scenarios:

1) Wait for the market to touch one of your blue envelope lines.

2) Monitor the price action and wait for a strong reversal candlestick to print in the opposite direction to the prevailing trend.

3) Consider opening a counter-trend position at the close on the day of the reversal candlestick (or close out your position if you had been riding the upward trend). Your first technical target is the 22 period moving average line.

Let’s have a closer look at that GBPUSD daily chart now to see exactly how those opportunities developed.

envelope2

(A): In this first shot Cable has taken a run at the top of the upper envelope from the lows of the move at 1.5000. We’ve seen a poke through the upper envelope which puts us on standby. We’re now waiting for a strong bearish bar to indicate a possible reversal.

envelope3

(B): We had to wait a while before we got a strong bearish (red) candlestick. I like to see one that closes below the lows of preceding candlesticks. You can go short at the close of B (or exit any long positions).

(C): The 22 period moving average is the initial target. This was pinged the very next day on this trade. You can close out your short trade for a quick profit or at least pull in your stop loss now.

A couple of weeks later, we’re down at the lower band…

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(D): We had a down move that penetrated the lower band. The market paused and then put in that strong Bullish Engulfing candle. Go long at the daily close (and cover short positions)?

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(E): Again, we weren’t kept waiting long for an exit on our trade. The first target (22MA) got hit the next day for a quick profit.

The next opportunity with this technique came in October…

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(F): There’s the penetration of the upper band to put us on stand-by. The trend may be stalling but we still need a strong red candle to indicate some bearish sentiment.

(?): And here’s why you need to be careful in filtering out good entry signals. We got a pullback to this area but nothing to suggest the bears had really jumped in with conviction.

(G): It was around a week later on that bearish engulfing candlestick (see how it covers the preceding green candle and closes below it) before we get the chance to go short.

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(H): And there’s the target filled a few days later for more profit.

So have a play around on your own charts. Try different sized envelopes on each of the pairs you’re interested in trading and see how often this set-up lets you get involved in good counter-trend opportunities.

Just remember – as with all robust strategies – it’s no magic bullet. You will have to weather the occasional loss. But I do think this is well worth you investigating and experimenting with further.

Be Prepared: Market Moving Data Coming This Week (London Time)

Be careful with the US holidays this week. Their markets also close early – 6pm London time – on Thursday (day after Thanksgiving).

Wednesday 27th November

09:30        UK    GDP                GBP
11:00        UK    CBI Survey            GBP
13:30        US    Jobless Claims        USD
13:30        US    Core Durable Goods    USD
14:45        US    Chicago PMI            USD
14:55        US    Michigan Consumer Sent.    USD

Thursday 28th November

All Day    US    Thanksgiving Holiday    USD
08:55        DE    German Employment    EUR
10:30        UK    Carney Speaks        GBP

Friday 29th November

All Day    US    Day after Thanksgiving     USD
07:00        DE    German Retail Sales    EUR
07:00        UK    Nationwide HPI        GBP
10:00        EUR    CPI                EUR
10:00        EUR    Employment numbers    EUR

As always, I hope you enjoyed this week’s issue and can take something useful away with you. Let me know how you get on spotting reversals with those moving average envelopes.