
The nature of currency pairs tends to shift over time. Some move up
the list, while others lose their charm and move down and sometimes out
of the list. This is due to many factors, that change. This is an
updated list, made towards the beginning of Q3:
- USD/CHF: The Swiss franc moved to the top. Interventions by the SNB belong to the past, despite the recent strength. The pair tends to break to an all-time low, then range back to the previous low. The ranges are very distinct. A break to the upside will likely meet another previous low.
- AUD/USD: The Australian dollar still isn’t in its good old days, but the performance is definitely improving. Resistance lines tend to work in a smoother manner than support lines, but they also work well.
- EUR/GBP: The cross tends to move in ranges, with relatively clear barriers. The narrower ranges made it somewhat harder, but it seems to return to wider ranges.
- NZD/USD: The recent strength of the kiwi, a currency sometimes overlooked by traders, made its moves much more predictable. This applies to support and resistance lines alike.
- GBP/USD: While the ranges are wider (and so should stops be), the lines are rather distinctive, especially towards the borders of the long term wide range. This pair closes the list.
Are you trading any of these pairs? Do you find them predictable or rather unpredictable?
As you can see, two major pairs are missing from the list. USD/JPY was never a fun pair. It can move in very frustrating narrow ranges and break lines in very slow and annoying manners.
Also the most popular pair, EUR/USD, is missing.
The Greek crisis, with the flood of news around it, make trading on
this pair quite choppy. This pair had better days, that might return
when things calm down.
Sumber: Forexcrunch
0 comments:
Post a Comment