SignalToSignal.com - Logical Trade LevelsOur Logical Trade Levels (Targets and Stall Points) indicator is a simple but powerful version of support and resistance. We do a fair bit a behind the scenes algorithmic magic but essentially these levels act as very strong support and resistance for entries and also targets. Many of our previously published ideas use these levels to determine likely stall points for our entries as well as best targets up and down. You can see from those published levels how easily you know where price will likely stall out or needs to move through.
While these levels work great for simple support and resistance style break out trading, they work even better when used in combination with our other systems. When using Logical Trade Levels with our other indicators you have a complete solution for not only entering trades correctly (using our Volume Analysis Trading System) but also exiting and avoiding trades at what are the best and worst areas based on the Logical Trade Levels.
To gain access to the Logical Volume Trading System, please visit our website .
If you have any questions, please contact us through the Contact link on our website - signaltosignal.com
Targets
Hawkeye Grabba ShortGrab pips with Hawkeye Grabba
Grabba is a simple mechanical system that you can manage yourself, using your own risk and reward profile.
The Hawkeye Grabba is a risk management tool which provides traders with a visual representation of the risk-to-reward profile on every trade.
For example, you can apply your own profit targets (say 10 pips) and each line will show you that multiple.
As with all the Hawkeye Indicators, Grabba can be applied to any timeframe and any chart and can be custom set to be used on any market, i.e. Forex, stock indices, commodities, etc.
Mayer Multiple v2.0 - Klahr ThresholdThis is a simple update to the Mayer Multiple script by Unbound , which charts an indicator created by Trace Mayer and popularized by Preston Pysh.
The original post identified any price below 2.4x the 100-day MA as the BTC buy threshold. While the logic there is historically sound, it does not account for the fact that the BTC trend is parabolic in nature. With that in mind, I've attempted to update the 2.4x multiple to react based on the moving average of the Mayer Multiple itself. To do so, I simply found the number that, when added to the MM moving average, historically hit the 2.4x multiple during periods of low volatility. This turns out to be 1.17.
The green line represents the Klahr Threshold (is it obnoxious if I call it that? I've always wanted an indicator named after me). As you can see from the above chart, it hovers around 2.4x in late 2012 to early 2013, rises above it until mid 2014, and then stays below until 2016. It then stays almost exactly at 2.4x until April 2017, when it rises significantly above it for the first time since July 2014. The convergence in late 2012 and 2016-2017 is what leads me to believe that this should be the basis for the updated threshold.
It's entirely possible that there's a more robust method of calculating a reactive threshold (or a different number that should be added to the multiple's MA), but I think this is a good first step in refining the multiple to withstand the test of time.