Forex
Strategy: How MACD Can Save You Anxiety
Regardless
of your Forex strategy, have you ever entered trades and shortly afterwards
wished you hadn't? The information that follows will hopefully cut
down greatly on the number of trades that cause you anxiety!
The MACD
(Moving Average Convergence Divergence) indicator can add a degree
of certainty to your Forex strategy.
As with
any indicator, it is too risky to enter trades on this signal alone.
However, as we will see, used with caution on higher time frames, it
can help confirm you are going in the right direction and that your
trade is higher probability.
Taking
MACD Apart
First, let’s
take MACD apart and describe it’s component parts.
The default
MACD on most charting packages sets 2 EMA’s (Exponential Moving Averages)
at 26 and 12 days.
This is
represented by a colored line (color varies according to charting package)
which crosses a different colored 9 EMA often termed the trigger line.
When MACD
(the 12/26 EMA) crosses above the trigger line (9 EMA) upward momentum
is indicated and vice versa.
A center
line, or zero line, often called the water line is also shown in the
MACD indicator. When MACD is above the water line an upward trend is
indicated, when it is below the water line, a downward trend is indicated.
MACD also
includes a histogram, small vertical lines that appear above or below
the zero line, not unlike mountains and valleys in appearance.
MACD is
a lagging indicator which follows price action.
The histogram
is an indicator of MACD. So watching the histogram can give you an
early indication of where MACD is going. The height of the histogram
can be a good momentum indicator.
Using
MACD As A Safety Indicator
How can
you use MACD to your advantage?
If you want
to be very cautious in your Forex strategy, going only for high probability
trades, then pay attention to MACD on the 4 hour and 1 hour charts.
Some traders
will only enter a trade when the 4 hour and 1 hour MACD’s are going
in the same direction. This will mean a lot less trades but the ones
you do take are likely to be profitable. (Agreement of the two MACD’s
is used in conjunction with other indicators, not by itself.)
MACD on
the 1 hour chart is particularly powerful. If you want to stay out
of trouble and avoid trades you might later regret, NEVER trade against
the direction of the 1 hour MACD. To do otherwise is not necessarily
foolhardy if you know what you are doing.
But for
the newer, less experienced trader, only trading long when MACD has
crossed up, or short when MACD has crossed down on the hourly chart
when your other favorite indicators line up, will make for a higher
success rate with your Forex strategy. It will also save you much anxiety
and heartache!
 |
USD/CAD
1 Hour Chart |
MACD
is shown in red, black is the signal or trigger line
MACD
pointing down
|
 |
USD/CAD
4 Hour Chart |
MACD
is shown in red, black is the signal or trigger line
MACD
pointing down
|
|