The euro extends its rally – for now

Jan 27, 2012, 11:07

Share with
friends:

Comments (11)

We’ve been looking at the EUR/USD a lot lately. It’s a fascinating market right now.

Next week, I’ll aim to cover another market – and it should start with the Dow on Monday.

Today, though, I want to stay with the euro and show you my latest analysis.

It illustrates an important principle while I attempt to understand the market’s position vis à vis the Elliott wave and tramline structure.

Recall from Wednesday that I had drawn in my best effort at identifying the Elliott wave and tramline structures in the rally off the mid-January low. This is the chart I showed then:

EUR / USD spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

I was not entirely happy with my label for the fifth wave, as the market had not made a clear high above wave 3. But I was giving it the benefit of the doubt.


MoneyWeek Trader logo

Claim your FREE report: The six-step game-plan for
spread betting profits


Fed announcement sends the euro to new highs

Since writing that post, though, the market dipped below the lower tramline, and then rallied strongly to a new high yesterday (see next chart below). This was the clear new high I was hoping for, courtesy of the Fed.

Looking at it now, this could be my fifth wave to complete this part of the rally segment.

So I looked for a new set of tramlines – and this is the result:

EUR / USD spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

Right away, these are much more satisfactory than the previous pair.

This is the perfect illustration of an important trading principle. That is, how it’s necessary to keep your eyes open for possibly better tramline placements.

I started with the centre tramline, which took in the 11 January low as well as the highs.

My parallel line below gratifyingly took in the two major lows – and then my third upper tramline touches the 9 and 10 January highs.

Altogether, this is much better. Now I have a more certain Elliott wave labelling, as marked in my next chart. My new 4th wave is now the Wednesday low.

EUR / USD spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

Note that my fifth wave rallied right to the centre tramline, and is backing off as I write. That was an ideal place to take profits on long positions, and possibly establish new short positions.

Trader tip: It is infinitely easier to find the best tramlines and Elliott wave labels on old charts than it is in real time – at least, it is for me. The best you can do is to use what information you have at the time and make your best guess. If later trading action forces you to make changes – so be it. Always pencil in your lines and labels – and have your eraser handy.

Why the euro could decline in the short term

So, if my labels are correct, I can expect a decline, at least to the lower tramline in a probable A-B-C pattern. We already have a budding A and B wave forming as I write.

I believe more downside action is on the cards for the euro, though. This 550-pip rally has taken some froth off the extreme bearishness evident at the 16 January lows. But the market appears poised for a resumption of the downtrend – for now at least.

But I shall be watching for signs of basing action – likely centred around a Fibonacci retracement level. I will be placing my Fibonacci levels over the chart very soon.

I’ll be back next week with more chart analysis. Don’t miss it.

• If you’re a new reader, or need a reminder about some of the methods I refer to in my trades, then do have a look at my introductory videos:

The essentials of tramline trading
Advanced tramline trading
An introduction to Elliott wave theory
Advanced trading with Elliott waves
Trading with Fibonacci levels
Trading with 'momentum'
Putting it all together

• Don't miss my next trading insight. To receive all my spread betting blog posts by email, as soon as I've written them, just sign up here .

Comments (11)

Share with
friends:

Comments

  • 1. Carlos

    (27 January 2012, 01:01PM)  Complain about this comment

    Hello John.

    Excellent comments!!!....thank you!!!...I like very much your work, I have learned a lot. Additional to your comments, I draw a fibonacci line since January 11th and the result is that we have reached the 38.2 level now and if the bulls continue we could be able to see 1.33 level. Thanks again.

    Best regards,
    Carlos

  • 2. Nick

    (27 January 2012, 02:29PM)  Complain about this comment

    John,
    Is it possible that you could mention the actual levels of your suggested stops, entry and limit levels when discussing your charts?

  • 3. JTT

    (27 January 2012, 02:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    Nick, if John mentioned stops then that would give the game away that having an idea of direction is very different from successfully trading it. John's articles are very good IMHO, but trading these ideas ia another matter.

  • 4. Rob

    (27 January 2012, 11:54PM)  Complain about this comment

    I see this correction a a double zigzag 5,3,5, with the "a"and "b" on 20th and 22nd of Jan respectively. The "b" wave is now the same length as "a" and experiencing resistance from the nearby 38% retracement of the last leg down from the 27th Oct high. High probability of a reversal now with the correction fully completed. Needless to say I'm short, but not in growth impaired way:-)

  • 5. Adam

    (28 January 2012, 02:45PM)  Complain about this comment

    New to trading myself, but have learned a bit off John, Looking at the fibonacci I've drawn(ie, could be completely wrong), it seems the next sticking point is at 3250 for this pair. Anyone agree with this?
    What's the views on the FTSE, charts looking week, testing support at 7000 on Monday I feel

  • 6. Susan

    (29 January 2012, 01:07PM)  Complain about this comment

    I thoroughly enjoy reading John's analysis and have learned much from him, but this time like Rob who has commented here, I have a different Wave Count - from both of them. Because of my uncertainty I will wait to see how things develop this coming week, before I make a trade.

  • 7. susan

    (29 January 2012, 01:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    In reply to Adam I think you are possibly right about the Euro at 3250. According to my wave count and tramlines there should be a pullback in that region. With the FTSE if you look at the yearly chart you'll see that it possibly has a bit to go yet before a downturn.

  • 8. Adam

    (29 January 2012, 05:29PM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi Susan, you mention the yearly chart, this is where i have trouble, depending on which time frame you use, all the indicators are at different times, looking at the hour chart, it looks weak, the yearly looks ok. So which one to use?
    Regards Adam

  • 9. Tom

    (29 January 2012, 10:26PM)  Complain about this comment

    Adam
    If you think it is bearish short term and you want to trade a retracement on the hourly/15 minute charts enter on a bounce on a tramline/fib and trade until you are happy.
    If long term you think it is bullish on the daily chart then wait for a retracement to end before entering.
    It is riskier trading against the trend you need to be disciplined and move your stops and take your profits quickly. It's tempting to let it run expecting a trend reversal, but then see your profits disappear and even make a loss.

  • 10. susan

    (30 January 2012, 03:11AM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi Adam,
    I think Tom has answered your question for me. It all depends on the timeframe you use and your attitude towards risk, whether you wish to go against the trend or not. Best of luck.

  • 11. Adam

    (31 January 2012, 04:33PM)  Complain about this comment

    Looks like I was right about the FTSE, pity I didn't let it run a bit longer :(

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


>