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- Mr-Forex replied Jul 29, 2010
To make it easy: yes.
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 29, 2010
From Marex, vwap ladder view. That are ESP prices and for the most time executable. Latency and how fast banks analyze order flow is an important factor - especially during volatile times.
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 29, 2010
It isn't that different as you think. Today,in the interbank market there are all major banks,big hedge funds,some brokers or very healthy individuals (>10mil) connected through elect. platforms. If you are trading really big sizes 10-100mil and ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 27, 2010
I doubt that you can move the EURO 10 pips with only 100mil To move it 1 pip you need in the best case 50-300mil depending on the daytime and when no other market maker / bank(s) refill the supply-ladder and when the bid stays "calm". That is an old ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 16, 2010
It goes from 1:1 to 1:6 when scapling the Euro.
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 9, 2010
a) "many" sellers come in and short market at some price levels but the supply on the offer is "weak" or fades away: it doesn't need a lot of money to push the market higher and to trigger stops: price rallys and the pros can unload their positions ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 7, 2010
Yes some banks pick off arbitrage opportunities between interdealer venues or by offering different spreads to customers. It lasts so long till there can made a quick profit.
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 7, 2010
VWAP is a calculation formula on volume & time period. Seeing the levels (if there sits demand or supply) is a good advantage when having aggregated market depth view and how price reacts.
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 6, 2010
The most common is f.e. VWAP
- Mr-Forex replied Jul 6, 2010
By monitoring/calculating inst. benchmarks on different time periods. Here you can see their intentions on specific dynamic price levels. And that is where you also want jump on. The procedure is: if the institution(s) want buy f.e. the YEN and have ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 30, 2010
Price action in its purest form is a never ending (slow/fast) tick by tick (buyers/sellers) stream. Since nobody can watch an infinite tick by tick chart, different timeframes (1,5,15m,hourly,daily,monthly) come into play where the price action is ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 24, 2010
Some guys only use Level II without charts and make money by reading order flow. But the real interesting thing is this: where are the dynamic levels on which institutions execute orders over the hole day depending on the time-frame. Institutions ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 23, 2010
You're wrong. There are possibilities in hedging f.e. Euro future and Spot E/U. When they are temporarily out of sync some professionals short the future while going long on the spot price (when the future has risen and spot didn't followed ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 22, 2010
Have analyzed some trades from woo. He definitely does not trade on institutional benchmarks or on advantageous prices even some trades were nice. So it must be another orderflow he thinks looking at.
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 22, 2010
Buying and selling the same pair at the same time: I don't see here any edge. You pay the spread twice. When you expect the market will make a huge move there is no guarantee the SL will be hit while the other position should run into profit. Some ...
- Mr-Forex replied Jun 17, 2010
When you want to know what is going on behind the chart you have to understand how institutions trade big sizes over time. I won't show how i spot institutional orderflow but here is a cause for thought: url
- Mr-Forex replied May 25, 2010
Hedging can be useful when you play the imbalances in correlated or negative correlated pairs. You can adjust the entry points more accurately if one pair doesn't move (immediately) by liquidating a long or short position from the other pair. But ...
- Mr-Forex replied May 22, 2010
Not necessarily. By reading the context by watching multiple MD: when this order on this pair was taken out but suddenly no more buyers on the upper ladder and price stops,something is strange. A potential indication of falling prices.
- Mr-Forex replied May 22, 2010
There are many tactics that are played on the order flow. The liquidity/order sizes vary from 5 to 100 lots on the EUR/USD (best bid/ask price). One example: Most time the intentions are veiled and hidden behind algos which split the orders in small ...
- Mr-Forex replied May 22, 2010
First it's important to know where big orders are sitting (or are spoofed), on the bid or ask. Before trading blindly on these huge numbers you have to monitor and notice previous support/resistance levels on the market deph and read the hole ...