This thread is about a fully featured, automated financial market analysis application specially designed to provide traders with key market levels required to enter actionable trades.
It is for traders of all levels whether you are an expert trader with several years of experience in institutional or retail trading or simply a novice trader who has little or no experience trading the financial markets.
- Traders do not need any prior knowledge or experience of technical analysis or fundamental analysis.
- Traders do not need years of training or experience to identify and calculate Supply and Demand levels.
However, it is important for traders to have at least an introductory knowledge of Money Management and Risk Management. Two topics which will not be covered in this thread.
INTRODUCTION
Supply and Demand is what moves all financial markets.
The Financial Instrument Analyzer (FIA) has been designed to detect, capture and analyze even the slightest variations in market Supply and Demand. It is uniquely positioned for use across a broad variety of financial markets including, but not limited to, the Currency Market, the Commodities Market, the Bond Market, the Stock Indices Market and the Futures Market. Furthermore, it could be used on any financial instrument and on any timeframe.
The Financial Instrument Analyzer (FIA) provides traders all the information they need to trade unfilled market gaps between Supply and Demand including Market Direction (i.e. Long, Short, High and Low), Entry, Stop Loss and Take Profit levels. There is never a need for traders to calculate these levels.
The Financial Instrument Analyzer (FIA) is a fully featured cloud-based application. It is not an "Expert Advisor" (EA) and, therefore, it is not available on any version of the MetaTrader trading platform or any other broker platform.
Very Simple Set of Rules (VSSR)
To trade using the Financial Instrument Analyzer (FIA), traders need only know and apply the following VSSR:
(1) in a Short market, traders Sell the Highs or Enter Short in the Price Range between the Short Level and the Retracement Levels,
(2) in a Long market, traders Buy the Lows or Enter Long in the Price Range between the Long Level and the Retracement Levels,
(3) for Take Profits, we have 2 options:
(i) the optimal way to use the FIA is to close Long trades on market Highs and close Short trades on market Lows, or
(ii) set your Take Profit as per technical levels indicated on the next Higher Timeframe and exceptionally in some cases the Lower Timeframe. Note: for practical purposes, only option (ii) we will use in this thread.
(4) never Buy as the market approaches a Supply level (Supply levels are always Bearish, not Short) or a Short Level on a Higher Timeframe, and
(5) never Sell as the market approaches a Demand level (Demand levels are always Bullish, not Long) or a Long Level on a Higher Timeframe.
In my posts, I will be giving traders market entry strategies including Risk Reward Ratio (RRR), Entry Levels, Stop Loss(es) and Take Profit targets for each trade.
We are now ready to have a good time and move forward with this thread.
Oh yes, one last thing, please take the time to READ my posts ...
Cheers all,
Jack Elio Ollio
CAUTION: due to the delay required to post and comment the charts, information may no longer be timely or accurate at the time of posting. Trades should only be entered on your demo account!
Financial Instrument Analyzer