Hi guys,
I have been reading allot of Darkstars posts and found this order flow stuff very interesting.
So I have been looking around the net for Order flow info and just found things about "tape reading" and level 2 orderbooks etc but here is my take on it:
Since the FX market is OTC, there is no "center" orderbook or whatever I should call it. What we have is FXCMs orderbook, OANDAs orderbook etc. which wont help at all because no big banks or big indivduals trade their order thru these small retail brokers.
Now, the second thing is that the FX market moves so god damn fast, how would ANYONE be able to process all that fast moving info and reading a fake hand on bid/offers to take a counter trade?
What this boils down to is really my question, is there any way of localizing where the orders MOST LIKELY will be ON A CHART.
IŽll give you an example, as a rookie: I think as a FX loser. And this was once portrayed to me by the market in a way that made me think "what the FUCK are you doing".
This is what happened:
The market trended down strongly, then was in a consolidating or congestion, easily drawn by two horizontal lines.
Fair enough I thought, I put up an upper and lower horizontal lines which also created my boundaries.
As smart as I am, I put up breakout orders BOTH directions (I know, I'm a sharp, greedy little kid.. Trying to catch both movements!!)
So how does the market humiliate me? Well it trades up and hits my order so I'm positioned LONG. Up a couple of pips and then moves waaay down and hits my stop-loss at the bottom boundary (remember the two horizontal lines?).
What does that tell me?
That tells me that I am STUPID. That tells me that my entry was someone elses short and my stop-loss was someone elses take profit. It almost feels like someone took my girlfriend really.
So this made me think, I have seen allot of traders using order flow in the stock market (obviously because it's easier since it's centralized) and almost all other markets but not the FX.
Let's say it's impossible to use a order book in FX: how would we then go about order flow? Is there any possible way of "thinking" about where the orders may lie?
The first thing that hits my mind is that there should most likely be stop-loss order below a consolidation range. And also there should be some market orders SHORT.
And reversed, there should be long order above the range, trying to catch a breakout.
But this can't be it, can't it? There has to be something more! (Ofcourse I understand that there is no way of knowing 100% where all the orders are).
So this is my take on what I have found on order flow and I am looking for more, it sounds extremely interesting!
And hope you guys (n' gals) can help me out here, how to "think" where the orders should be and perhaps point me to the direction of getting more info about order flow.
Thank you and hope you all had a great new year celebration!
PS. Sorry for my English, if you do not understand what I mean I will happily try to explain it more.
I have been reading allot of Darkstars posts and found this order flow stuff very interesting.
So I have been looking around the net for Order flow info and just found things about "tape reading" and level 2 orderbooks etc but here is my take on it:
Since the FX market is OTC, there is no "center" orderbook or whatever I should call it. What we have is FXCMs orderbook, OANDAs orderbook etc. which wont help at all because no big banks or big indivduals trade their order thru these small retail brokers.
Now, the second thing is that the FX market moves so god damn fast, how would ANYONE be able to process all that fast moving info and reading a fake hand on bid/offers to take a counter trade?
What this boils down to is really my question, is there any way of localizing where the orders MOST LIKELY will be ON A CHART.
IŽll give you an example, as a rookie: I think as a FX loser. And this was once portrayed to me by the market in a way that made me think "what the FUCK are you doing".
This is what happened:
The market trended down strongly, then was in a consolidating or congestion, easily drawn by two horizontal lines.
Fair enough I thought, I put up an upper and lower horizontal lines which also created my boundaries.
As smart as I am, I put up breakout orders BOTH directions (I know, I'm a sharp, greedy little kid.. Trying to catch both movements!!)
So how does the market humiliate me? Well it trades up and hits my order so I'm positioned LONG. Up a couple of pips and then moves waaay down and hits my stop-loss at the bottom boundary (remember the two horizontal lines?).
What does that tell me?
That tells me that I am STUPID. That tells me that my entry was someone elses short and my stop-loss was someone elses take profit. It almost feels like someone took my girlfriend really.
So this made me think, I have seen allot of traders using order flow in the stock market (obviously because it's easier since it's centralized) and almost all other markets but not the FX.
Let's say it's impossible to use a order book in FX: how would we then go about order flow? Is there any possible way of "thinking" about where the orders may lie?
The first thing that hits my mind is that there should most likely be stop-loss order below a consolidation range. And also there should be some market orders SHORT.
And reversed, there should be long order above the range, trying to catch a breakout.
But this can't be it, can't it? There has to be something more! (Ofcourse I understand that there is no way of knowing 100% where all the orders are).
So this is my take on what I have found on order flow and I am looking for more, it sounds extremely interesting!
And hope you guys (n' gals) can help me out here, how to "think" where the orders should be and perhaps point me to the direction of getting more info about order flow.
Thank you and hope you all had a great new year celebration!
PS. Sorry for my English, if you do not understand what I mean I will happily try to explain it more.