Crisis in Crude: Where do we go from here?

March 30, 2007 · Filed Under Trader Lessons, Trading Tips, Trading Videos · 1 Comment 

Crisis in Crude

I just finished this video on Wednesday and posted up for you to see. We are living in some very interesting times when not everything is what it is,

Watch here.

Enjoy the video and please feel free to comment.

Cheers

Adam

10 free trading lessons that can make a difference

10 free trading lessons that can make a difference

Dear trader,

I really believe that the email course I have put together for you will make a difference to your bottom line.
Here is a short video of me explaining how you can start the course today.

Watch it here.

Enjoy,

How To Use The Relative Strength Index

March 16, 2007 · Filed Under Technical Indicators, Trader Lessons · 1 Comment 

How To Use The Relative Strength Index

One of the most useful tools employed by many technical commodity traders is a momentum oscillator which measures the velocity of directional price movement.

When prices move up very rapidly, at some point the commodity is considered overbought; when they move down very rapidly, the commodity is considered oversold at some point. In either case, a reaction or reversal is imminent. The slope of the momentum oscillator is directly proportional to the velocity of the move, and the distance traveled up or down by this oscillator is proportional to the magnitude of the move.

Read more here

When X’s and O’s make sense

March 16, 2007 · Filed Under Technical Indicators, Trader Lessons · 1 Comment 

Point-and-Figure Charts

You know what point-and-figure charts look like: an elongated version of tic-tac-toe. Yet, they provide another means of determining a trend. In fact, their advantage over a bar chart is the specific buy and sell signals — no personal interpretation is needed.

The pork belly chart is shown for the same time period in both bar chart and point-and-figure form. The differences in appearance are striking. This is due mainly to the lack of a time scale on the point-and-figure chart. Time is irrelevant; price movements are charted only when they occur. On days when no new high or low is made, no additional entries are made on the chart.

Read more here

How to use moving average in your trading

March 16, 2007 · Filed Under Technical Indicators, Trader Lessons · Comment 

Trending With Moving Averages

Moving averages are one tool to help you detect a change in trend. They measure buying and selling pressures under the assumption that no commodity can sustain an uptrend or downtrend without consistent buying and selling pressure.

A moving average is an average of a number of consecutive prices updated as new prices become available. The moving average swallows temporary price aberrations but tells you when prices begin moving consistently in one direction.

Trading with moving averages will never position you in the market at precisely the right time. They are intended to help you take profits from the middle of the trend and hold losses to a minimum.

Read more here

Great way to improve your trading in the comfort of your own home.

March 15, 2007 · Filed Under General · 1 Comment 


This is another quality product from INO.com that is geared to helping you improve your trading. Now you can watch and listen to experts in different investment fields in the comfort of your home or office. DVDs and CDs are delivered to you via first class mail.

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A tale of two markets

March 15, 2007 · Filed Under Trading Videos · Comment 

Hi, Adam Hewison here. I thought you might want to take a look at this video and see if you can guess the direction of these markets. Only time will tell if you are right.

Enjoy and profit.

New Video on Crude Oil

March 15, 2007 · Filed Under Trading Videos · Comment 

I just finished this video on crude oil that I think you will enjoy. The potential for a significant move from these levels exists.

Enjoy and profit.

Adam

How To Use Cycles

March 14, 2007 · Filed Under Trader Lessons, Trading Tips · Comment 

How To Use Cycles
Everything in nature moves in cycles. . . the cycles of the seasons … night and day… tides… phases of the moon. Each year animals hibernate… geese migrate… salmon swim upstream to spawn… and every seven years lemmings run into the ocean.

 While nature’s cycles are very visible, there are many cycles in the futures markets that are not quite as obvious. Often the reason some cycles are not easily seen is because the interaction of many large and small cycles makes individual cycles harder to see.

Cycles are the tendency for events to repeat themselves at more or less uniform intervals. One of the easiest cycles to see and understand is the seasonal cycle. Agricultural commodities have a repetitive annual price pattern called the seasonal price cycle. More than 70 of the time, the lowest cash prices of the year for corn, cotton and soybeans occur during the fall harvest period. Due to increased marketings, cattle and hogs also have price weakness during the fall. Wheat and oats tend to make seasonal lows during their summer harvest. Seasonal price trends are a reflection of regular annual changes in supply and demand factors caused by weather, production and demand.

Read full story

How To Use The Relative Strength Index

March 14, 2007 · Filed Under Technical Indicators, Trader Lessons · Comment 

How To Use The Relative Strength Index
One of the most useful tools employed by many technical commodity traders is a momentum oscillator which measures the velocity of directional price movement.

When prices move up very rapidly, at some point the commodity is considered overbought; when they move down very rapidly, the commodity is considered oversold at some point. In either case, a reaction or reversal is imminent. The slope of the momentum oscillator is directly proportional to the velocity of the move, and the distance traveled up or down by this oscillator is proportional to the magnitude of the move.

The momentum oscillator is usually characterized by a line on a chart drawn in two dimensions. The vertical axis represents magnitude or distance the indicator moves; the horizontal axis represents time. Such a momentum oscillator moves very rapidly at market turning points and then tends to slow down as the market continues the directional move. Suppose we are using closing prices to calculate the oscillator and the price is moving up daily by exactly the same increment from close to close. At some point, the oscillator begins to flatten out and eventually becomes a horizontal line. If the price begins to level out, the oscillator will begin to descend.

Read more here

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