Are the weekly win rate of 14 wins and 0 losses over 14 games from May 9 to May 13, 2022 reproducible!?
Good evening, everyone.
My name is Ku (Kū), a part-time trader.
Today, I plan to mainly write a verification video for last week's MT4-exclusive indicator “Ajinitchi.”
To summarize, the verification results show 14 wins and 0 losses in 14 trades.
If you have purchased Ajinitchi, you can also perform past verifications yourselves, so please try verifying across various currency pairs.
I think there are people who do not use Ajinitchi, so please take a look at the accuracy of this signaling tool.
And for those who want to try “Ajinitchi,” you can purchase here, and you’ll be able to learn the secret technique of “correlation and anti-correlation” for free as part of insider information.
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/tools/indicators/36476
The video recording lasts about 25 minutes, with the first half released as a free video and the latter half as a paid, member-exclusive video.
First, please take a look at the past verification video showing 14 wins and 0 losses.
Now I’ll explain by capturing parts of the video.

Since last week I expanded the monitored currency pairs to about three more, making a total of 12 pairs.
The far right middle and below are not currency pairs but the Nikkei 225 and gold.
These two are not targets for correlation or anti-correlation, but I display them because they are market interests of mine personally.
In reality, 10 currency pairs become the targets for correlation and anti-correlation monitoring, and this time AUDJPY was newly added.
When aligning in MT4, the distribution among the 10 currency pairs would be 3-3-4, so it wasn’t evenly distributed, which is why AUDJPY was previously excluded, but from now I’ve included it.
Even looking at my recent trading history, there are many entries related to the Aussie, and with the dollar-yen in an unprecedented weak-yen trend, AUDJPY seems interesting.
Now I will enlarge and verify each currency pair.
First, the familiar USD/JPY.
Before that, a recap: let’s review the past verification rules.

The second rule above is the most important; for intermediate traders who have established a discretionary standard for “correlation and anti-correlation,” entries right after a signal should be avoided.
Beginners and those just starting to use the paid indicator “Ajinitchi” or the free indicator “Nanashiki Kū” should become comfortable with the five rules above first.

There is only one signal per week.
Ajinitchi signals do not repaint, so past verifications remain valid.
Also, because the number of signals is extremely low like this, I view them as signals that indicate only large trends and the price direction.
Now, let’s enlarge the first entry location for USD/JPY.

Here, after a pullback confirmed post-signal, placing a buy stop 2 pips above the recent high results in a nuanced verdict: there is a risk of being stopped out early if the price makes a slight new high just above 2 pips.
If all 14 wins achieved 10 pips of profit each, that would be 140 pips of profit; so if USD/JPY were unlucky and hit a stop at 50 pips, the net would still be 90 pips in profit.
It could be that some entries do not offer favorable risk-reward.
If by luck the stop is 2 pips or more, then the 14 wins would still maintain a 100% win rate.
Next is EUR/JPY.

Just before a sharp decline, a strangely timely sell signal appeared.
The timing is perfect!
Even assuming a slow rebound, there is 28 pips to the first low, so it’s a win.
I think the signaling advantage is evident in today’s market, so please take a look at current EUR/JPY weakness for reference.

The important thing to reiterate is that signals are not easily indicating a trend reversal.
In my 15 years of using MT4, many signal tools have shown many up-and-down signals in a short period.
When large trends appear, such as weekly bearish candles, if there are many long-entry signals, the more you endure, the larger the unrealized losses, increasing the risk of ruin.
If you don’t set a stop or move the stop in a worse direction, it triggers forced liquidation countdowns.
In my 10 years of experiencing drawdown, when the unrealized losses became substantial, I would unexpectedly change the stop line; thus, one of the aims in signal development was to have high accuracy that indicates only the direction of the trend.
In short, the key is to have a signal that can indicate medium- to long-term trends.
The more you endure, the greater the profit can become, which is wonderful.
Now, onto the next currency pair.

Again, a long signal appears just before a sharp rise.
Conversely, be careful with signals after a too-rapid rise.
From the central long signal, if you pull back and enter with a stop, the maximum price movement can reach 88 pips.
Here is the AUD/USD image.

There is about 70 pips to the latest high, followed by a deep pullback.
If trailing is functioning, such deep pullbacks should not turn into losses.
Trailing typically ends with small profits, but after experiencing such patterns, trailing becomes an essential safety measure.
Now the second signal for AUD.
Next was a short signal.

In a simulation where you wait for the pullback and place a stop, the distance from entry to the low is 43 pips.
If an intermediate trader can judge correlation and anti-correlation, they can enter at market price alongside the signal, in which case the profit to the lowest price reaches about 75 pips, nearly double.
If you purchase “Ajinitchi” and want to learn the intermediate-level “correlation and anti-correlation” for free, click here.
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/tools/indicators/36476
And the last AUD signal of last week was a long signal for AUD.

At this point, there were 9 pips from the last signal on Friday to the most recent high, but according to the verification rule, it’s 10 pips or more to count as a win, so it was not counted as a win or loss.
But you must be curious how this signal would render, right?
The answer is as follows.

If you hold the position as a swing trade into the week, you might still be up 88 pips.
So technically it would be 15 wins and 0 losses, right?
This is how a video verifying all 12 currency pairs turned out.
From here on, the content is limited to members only. Briefly, when observing all 12 currency pairs simultaneously, the member video for intermediate traders mainly teaches methods that can use market orders as well.
Also, there is a method to make four entries from one signal.
This is where it gets interesting: once you understand correlation and anti-correlation and their coherence, you can identify similar patterns.
Then a single signal can enable two or more simultaneous entries if timing aligns.
Here’s a preview of the member-exclusive video titles.

So I’ll end here for today.
If you’re interested, please check the details at the link below.
See you again!
Investment Navi+ (free articles in the first half, subscription-only articles in the second half)
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/finance/navi/series/1543
Insider method for paid indicator “Ajinitchi” is available here. [Password required]
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/finance/navi/series/1565
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/tools/indicators/36476
https://www.gogojungle.co.jp/tools/indicators/37373