Dislikedi'm in those trade... but i narrow down to tf1h for entry... stop out by TSL +50Ignored
- #9,470
- Mar 6, 2008 4:34pm Mar 6, 2008 4:34pm
- Joined Feb 2006 | Status: 'Try-hard' extraordinaire... | 2,151 Posts
Bundy's status today: "Waiting..." 
Where can I learn more about Price Action like those in James16 charts? 9 replies
Dislikedi'm in those trade... but i narrow down to tf1h for entry... stop out by TSL +50Ignored
Dislikedsomeone notice to this trendline.....big short is knoking the door...Ignored
DislikedIt is a very good thread, but also so long. Of course it is very important to read all the thread. But is there a latest version or compilation of the system?
Best regardsIgnored
DislikedHi
What you mean by saying this....what not good with the data before 2000?
Thanks
ShayIgnored
DislikedI wish to look at a number of commodity markets daily charts without have to create each chart one by one. For example I have a daily profile in MT4 so I can look at each daily pair in a matter of a couple of minutes. Anyone know of such software/web page/trading software for commodity markets. I have a commodity broker and platform, however the charting is one by one...Ignored
Dislikedohhh you right....i didn't think about it....so what made the data before 1999/2000...anyone know?...is it ok to use this data...?
Thanks
ShayIgnored
DislikedDon't quote me on this, but I think the German Deutsche Mark (DEM, DM), was the most influential currency up until the Euro came into existence. A lot of old data in Eu charts is based on historic DM prices.
I think...
Check out Wiki for some info on the DM if you like, here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsche_MarkIgnored
DislikedYou could use a MT4 demo account from North Finance for example. Besides forex, they offer a bunch of commodities, major stock indices and stocks as well, directly in Metatrader. Just right click in the "The markets" window and select "show all".
RMIgnored
DislikedI don't think the Euro came into existance until around 1999/2000, so the data before that is based on some sort of average of the currencies that the Euro replaced - I think.Ignored