Home > General > Forex Live Chart - Learn To Use Charts

Forex Live Chart - Learn To Use Charts

December 11th, 2009

If you have interest to learn market analysis, you will need an access to a forex live chart. This chart is created at once by using current market data, so you can have actual data on market movement during that period. Basically, it is a very useful information tool to have even if you don’t do your own analysis.

First of all, you have to pick the currency pair that you want to analyze; it usually comes in the form of a drop down menu. After you find the one you want, select the chart type, it usually comes in 4 forms: Line, Bar, Candlestick, and Table. If you are a beginner, I suggest start with a Bar type. After you pick the type, select a time frame; it can be five minutes, fifteen minutes, weekly, etc.

In a bar chart, each vertical bar that you see represents a time frame. The top of the bar is the highest price and the bottom of the bar is the lowest price during that particular time frame. For each vertical bar, there are two horizontal bars, one to the left and the other to the right. The left bar represent the opening price and the right bar represent the closing price for that time frame. Tips: Use the zoom function to see it clearly. Usually, charting is a standard feature in a trading platform, read more about it at forex trading platforms.

There are some things that you need to know when using forex live chart:

About Support and Resistance
The market movement is unpredictable and it can goes anywhere at any time. But we can get the information from historical data that there are a period of time where the price doesn’t goes higher or lower from a specific price.
Example:

-From July to December, the EUR/USD prices never exceed 1.645, that means 1.645 is the resistance for EUR/USD during that period.

- From January to May, the USD/JPY prices never fall below 90.070, that mean 90.70 is the support for USD/JPY during that period.

These support and resistance data can be used to decide entry point. A conservative method is buying at support and sells at resistance. There is also more advanced strategy such as buying at resistance breakout and sell at higher price; it is all depend on the currency, circumstances, and your trading system.
Note: Breakout is when the price move through the support or resistance line.
Today, there are various easier ways to decide entry point, read about it at forex trading signals.

 

Indicators
A good charting tool will at least have the feature to add various indicators. Indicator is a mathematical calculation based on prices that can be used to help you make decision. For example: MVA indicator can show you the average price for a certain period, EMA show you the weighted price calculation for a certain period, etc.

Back Testing
A lot of trader use forex live chart to do back testing for their system. They test their systems against the chart data on a specific period of time and see if the system is profitable or not. The common problem with this is when they found that it doesn’t works, they tweaking the system so it can match the data and always create profitable transaction.

This is a huge mistake and usually the system will collapse immediately when applied to the current market. Back testing is good and you definitely can use the chart for that, but you also need to test the system in the current market for at least two or three months before decide that it is works or not. Utilizing a practice account for this test is recommended.

Forex live chart can be used in various other ways to support a trader and understanding the basic function is a good start for your trader career. If you interesting to know more about forex trading, visit learn currency trading.

 

 Mail this post

StumbleUpon It!

Technorati Tags: ,

General ,

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.