Eidriel wrote:Ive got something to ask.
From what I know we should only be trading in the direction of the directional bias.
Dominant directional bias, correct.
Eidriel wrote:It seems that the long term trend is bullish, while the midterm trend is bearish, but the short term trend is bullish?
What do we do in this case?
Well it's covered on several occasions within the thread, but I'll recap it again
Firstly you need to establish exactly what it is that's going to determine your bias.
If it's the 60sma on your 1 hour chart then you can use the slope & positioning of the moving average to assist you in determining the primary bias in sync with the natural ebb & flow of the price action.
If it's a wave type visual, then as long as price is continuing to print higher highs & higher lows in an uptrend or lower lows & lower highs in a downtrend & the price action doesn't invalidate that stair-step process, you're ready to consider placing a bet via either a pullback or a breakout (depending on your preference).
Don't lose sight of the fact this is predominantly a
dual or multi-timeframe approach.
If you can't quickly determine a clear & visible bias when opening up your primary timeframe then either move up a timeframe to see if it can offer assistance or leave it be & keep scrolling through your basket of pairs until you spot something that isn't so confusing.
There won't be opportunities to trade every day.
Don't force low probability trades. Use patience & keep your discipline to only get involved when the juiciest opportunities reveal themselves. Eidriel wrote:What timeframe do you all use? I just use the 1H for bias identification and entry as well.
It doesn't matter what anybody else uses, the structure is universal.
Each individual will accommodate it to suit their own styles, preferences & trading objectives.
The basic framework is the same.
1) Determine a primary timeframe from which to establish your bias & identify the key reaction levels &
2) Either use that timeframe to plot & place your bets, or utilize a (lower) secondary timeframe to trigger & assist with the trade management decision process.
Eidriel wrote:Is the 60 SMA on the 1HOUR the best method to identify this bias by looking at the direction in which the SMA points?
If the 1 hour chart is your primary timeframe, yes.
But like I said, don't lose sight of the fact this approach works best when incorporating a small variety of equally effective measures such as a multi-timeframe view.
Eidriel wrote:So on this chart example that I give, I guess I will be buying on dips since the 60 SMA is pointing up?
If that criteria is your primary reason for considering a long bet, then sure.
But you might also want to take into consideration other price action based prompts, such as the bullish divergence (& extreme stoch hook) on the 4 hour chart corresponding with a 1-2-3 continuation set up on your 1 hour (also hooking up off 20) through those 4 hour indecision bars off 1.0420 during the New York session?
That pair at that area isn't exactly what I'd term as a nailed on higher probability opportunity, but then my view & perspective is bound to conflict with yours & others due to different experience levels, trading objectives & risk attitude.

