15 battles, 15 wins, 0 losses! Win rate 100%! Publication of past verification results from April 14–21, 2022.
Good morning everyone.
Today is Wednesday, April 27, 2022.
This morning I received some happy news.
What it is, is that this blog is written for a monthly subscription of 2,980 yen, but since there were zero purchasers, I had been publishing everything for free.
However, just a moment ago, the first paying subscriber was born!
Since the first month is free, I would be grateful if you could also register and consider whether this article is worth paying for over the next month.
I sincerely appreciate those who have purchased.
With that, the first half will be free articles, and the latter half's "Highly Classified Method" chorus will be restricted to limited public viewing.
The free articles will mainly be written for beginners.
The paid articles will be written for intermediate readers.
Definitions of beginner and intermediate: because I deal with indicators and expert advisers using MT4, I define beginners as those not yet familiar with these two kinds of tools.
Also, beginners who are unfamiliar with FX terminology will be considered beginners.
Therefore, intermediate readers are those who are somewhat accustomed to MT4 operations and are also familiar with FX terminology.
The FX terms I commonly use are the following words.
Trend
Range
Uptrend
Downtrend
Upward trend
Downward trend
Range market
Pullback
Buying on pullbacks
Rebound
Rebound high
Rebound selling
Indicator
Parameters
EA
Expert Advisor
Main chart
Sub chart
Stochastic
Ichimoku Kinko Hyo
Conversion Line
Base Line
Multi-Time Frame
Higher timeframe
Lower timeframe
Consistency
Correlation
Inverse correlation
5-minute chart
1-hour chart
4-hour chart
Daily chart
Weekly chart
…and roughly about these things.
If you don’t understand even one of the terms above, you might be at beginner level, and even if you know all of them, if you haven’t put them into practice you might still be a beginner, right?
Well, whether you’re a beginner, intermediate, or advanced is something you decide yourself, so please freely define it by your own judgment.
Now back to the main topic.
Today's title is…
『15 Trades, 15 Wins, 0 Losses! 100% Win Rate! Past verification results from April 14–21, 2022!』
That’s what it is.
This is the result of testing all nine currency pairs for the past week with five beginner-oriented trading rules.
It would be good for everyone to cultivate a habit of doing past verifications on weekends as much as possible.
Because FX operates 24 hours a day, five days a week = 120 hours, so even if a full-time trader watches the chart about 10 hours a day, that’s about 50 hours per week.
To have watched 50 hours of a 120-hour rotating FX chart means, conversely, that 70 hours of chart time you haven’t watched.
In other words, there are times when you haven’t watched the chart for more than half of the time, so what happened in the remaining 70 hours you couldn’t monitor, and how well did your method work?
If you were there at the moment, would you have entered?
If you entered, what method would you have used to enter?
Was it market order?
Was it limit order?
Was it stop order?
Where did you set the stop loss?
Where and with what basis did you take profit?
There are many insights that can be gained from past verifications.
Whether it’s a method you devised yourself or one advocated by someone else, past verifications reveal many strengths and weaknesses.
Overall, does this method stand up?
I think it’s worth verifying.
This Sunday I uploaded a short explanatory video of about 10 minutes per piece for the past verification on YouTube, so please take a look.
The free indicator I provide, “Seven Colored Sky,” and the paid indicator “Ajinitchi” both generate signals only about twice a week, so verification is quick, but for indicators that generate many signals, verification becomes difficult.
Whether those signal tools have an edge depends on indicators that do not generate many signals being optimal.
Now, here is the first of the three-part video.
Next comes the second part.
The final third part is here.
In paid articles, we will write about a traded logic with five trading rules that confirm signals and a commentary on trading logic that can be practiced when intermediate signals are not issued.
We will also explain how to enter decisively by discretionary judgment when a signal is confirmed.
In the beginner section, we do not touch on market-order entry methods as part of the “five trading rules,” but in practice I enter using market orders more than half the time.
One of the advanced techniques is correlation and inverse correlation.
In other words, after a signal is confirmed and you look at the chart, one of your discretionary judgment criteria is correlation and inverse correlation.
By making this judgment, you can enter by market order in addition to stop orders.
The explanation methods include blog with static images and YouTube exclusive videos with restricted access.
We will also explain about “limit orders” in the article.
From here on, the explanation will be for the paid blog.