| Pattern | Signal | Detection Rule | Strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hammer | Bullish Reversal | Body ≤ 30% of range, lower wick ≥ 2.2× body, small body at top — after downtrend | ★★★★★ |
| Inverted Hammer | Bullish Reversal | Body ≤ 30% of range, upper wick ≥ 2.2× body, small body at bottom — after downtrend | ★★★★★ |
| Shooting Star | Bearish Reversal | Body ≤ 30% of range, upper wick ≥ 2.2× body, small body at bottom — after uptrend | ★★★★★ |
| Hanging Man | Bearish Reversal | Body ≤ 30% of range, lower wick ≥ 2.2× body, small body at top — after uptrend | ★★★★★ |
| Bullish Engulfing | Strong Bullish | Current bullish candle (Close > Open) completely engulfs previous bearish candle body | ★★★★★ |
| Bearish Engulfing | Strong Bearish | Current bearish candle (Open > Close) completely engulfs previous bullish candle body | ★★★★★ |
| Morning Star | Strong Bullish Reversal | Bearish candle → Doji → Bullish candle (third closes ≥ midpoint of first) | ★★★★★ |
| Evening Star | Strong Bearish Reversal | Bullish candle → Doji → Bearish candle (third closes ≤ midpoint of first) | ★★★★★ |
| Doji | Indecision | Body ≤ 5% of total range | ★★★★★ |
| Pattern | Bias | Detection Rule | Target Calculation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Head & Shoulders | Bearish | Three peaks: centre (head) highest, left/right shoulders similar (±2%), neckline connects troughs | Head height subtracted from neckline break |
| Inverse H&S | Bullish | Three troughs: centre deepest, shoulders similar (±2%), neckline connects peaks | Head height added to neckline break |
| Double Top | Bearish | Two highs within 2% of each other, valley between ≥3% below highs | Height = highs − valley, subtracted from breakdown |
| Double Bottom | Bullish | Two lows within 2% of each other, peak between ≥3% above lows | Height = peak − lows, added to breakout |
| Triple Top | Bearish | Three touches at same resistance (±1%), fails each time | Resistance − support, subtracted from breakdown |
| Triple Bottom | Bullish | Three touches at same support (±1%), holds each time | Resistance − support, added to breakout |
| Pattern | Bias | Detection Rule | Breakout Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ascending Triangle | Bullish | Flat top resistance, rising bottom trendline (higher lows) | Above flat top (≥1× ATR) |
| Descending Triangle | Bearish | Flat bottom support, falling top trendline (lower highs) | Below flat bottom (≥1× ATR) |
| Symmetrical Triangle | Directional | Converging trendlines (rising lows, falling highs) | First breakout direction (≥1.5× ATR) |
| Bull Flag | Bullish | Sharp vertical rise → parallel or downward-sloping consolidation (10–40 candles) | Above flag top |
| Bear Flag | Bearish | Sharp vertical drop → parallel or upward-sloping consolidation (10–40 candles) | Below flag bottom |
| Rising Wedge | Bearish | Both trendlines rising, upper line steeper → converging | Below lower trendline |
| Falling Wedge | Bullish | Both trendlines falling, lower line steeper → converging | Above upper trendline |
| Concept | Detection Rule | Confirmation |
|---|---|---|
| Support | Price bounces from same level ≥2 times within 3% range | Volume increases on bounce |
| Resistance | Price rejects from same level ≥2 times within 3% range | Volume increases on rejection |
| Breakout | Close ≥1× ATR above resistance or below support | Volume ≥1.5× 20-day average |
| Role Reversal | Broken support becomes new resistance (or vice versa) | Price retests and reverses |
LAGGING Confirms moves that have already started — best used as confirmation, not as the trigger
RSI measures the speed and size of recent price moves on a 0–100 scale. It answers: has price moved too far too fast in one direction? Most useful as a confirmation tool — a pattern at a key S/R level with RSI confirming is significantly stronger than either alone.
| Value | Interpretation | Action |
|---|---|---|
| > 70 | Overbought | Look for bearish reversal patterns |
| < 30 | Oversold | Look for bullish reversal patterns |
| 30–70 | Neutral | Follow trend direction |
- Bearish DivPrice makes higher high, RSI makes lower high → SELL signal
- Bullish DivPrice makes lower low, RSI makes higher low → BUY signal
LAGGING Double-lagged (EMA of EMA) — signal can come well after the optimal entry
MACD measures the relationship between two EMAs. MACD line = EMA(12) − EMA(26); Signal line = 9-period EMA of MACD line; Histogram = MACD − Signal. Bars growing = momentum building; shrinking = fading.
| Condition | Signal |
|---|---|
| MACD line crosses above Signal line | Bullish momentum |
| MACD line crosses below Signal line | Bearish momentum |
| Histogram turns from negative to positive | Acceleration up |
| Histogram turns from positive to negative | Acceleration down |
| Histogram shrinking (towards zero) | Momentum fading — potential reversal |
LAGGING Trend direction confirmed after price has already moved — use for bias and context, not for precise entry timing
What is a moving average?
Price moves up and down every single day — a lot of that is just noise. A moving average smooths that noise by showing you the average closing price over the last N days as a single line on the chart. Instead of reacting to every individual candle, you see one clean line that reveals the actual direction price has been heading.
Simple (SMA) vs Exponential (EMA) — what's the difference?
A Simple Moving Average (SMA) treats every past day equally — a price from 6 weeks ago counts exactly the same as today's price. The problem: if GBP/USD rallied sharply last week, the SMA is still being dragged down by old stale data and lags badly.
An Exponential Moving Average (EMA) fixes this by giving more weight to recent candles and less weight to older ones. The result: EMA reacts faster to new price moves, sits closer to current price, and is far more useful as a dynamic support/resistance line. This is why professional traders use EMA, not SMA.
First calculate the multiplier k — this controls how much weight today's price gets:
k = 2 ÷ (period + 1)
Then each new day, apply:
EMA = (Today's Price × k) + (Yesterday's EMA × (1 − k))
In plain English: today's EMA is mostly yesterday's EMA, nudged slightly toward today's price. The larger k is, the more it gets nudged — meaning it reacts faster.
96.1% from yesterday's EMA
Responds to moves within days
99.0% from yesterday's EMA
Takes weeks/months to shift
Why 50 and 200 specifically — and not 47 or 193?
These are not magic numbers derived from maths. They work because everyone watches them. Millions of traders, hedge funds, central banks, and trading algorithms worldwide have the exact same 50 EMA and 200 EMA on their charts. When GBP/USD drops to the 200 EMA, buyers step in — not because the line has any special power, but because every other participant expects it to hold and acts accordingly. That collective action creates real support. This is called a self-fulfilling prophecy, and it is the actual mechanism behind why these specific levels work.
EMA as dynamic support and resistance
A horizontal support line sits at a fixed price forever. The EMA moves every day as new candles are added — making it dynamic. The support level rises as the uptrend continues. The classic swing trade: confirm uptrend (price > 50 EMA > 200 EMA), wait for price to pull back and touch the 50 EMA, then enter long when a bullish candlestick pattern appears at that level. The EMA tells you where to look; the candlestick pattern tells you when to enter.
| Condition | Bias | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Price > 50 EMA > 200 EMA | Strong Uptrend | All three stacked bullish — only look for buys; enter on pullbacks to 50 EMA |
| Price < 50 EMA < 200 EMA | Strong Downtrend | All three stacked bearish — only look for sells; enter on rallies to 50 EMA |
| 50 EMA crosses above 200 EMA | Golden Cross ⚡ | Medium-term momentum has flipped bullish vs the full year — major signal, confirm with volume |
| 50 EMA crosses below 200 EMA | Death Cross ⚡ | Medium-term momentum has flipped bearish vs the full year — major signal, confirm with volume |
| Price between 50 EMA and 200 EMA | Mixed | Conflicting signals — reduce position size, wait for a clear stack before entering |
ATR measures volatility — the average size of a daily candle over the last 14 days. On GBP/USD daily, ATR is typically 70–120 pips. Use it to size stops: a stop of 1× ATR gives the trade room to breathe through normal daily fluctuation without being stopped out by noise.
Standard VWAP resets each session — useless on daily swing charts. Anchored VWAP (AVWAP) is anchored to a key swing high or low and shows the average price paid by participants since that event. It acts as a dynamic S/R level. Leading/Dynamic — unlike EMAs, it responds to volume, not just price.
| Condition | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Price above AVWAP | Participants since anchor in profit — Bullish bias |
| Price below AVWAP | Participants since anchor underwater — Bearish bias |
| Price tests AVWAP from above | Potential dynamic support — look for bullish pattern confirmation |
| Price tests AVWAP from below | Potential dynamic resistance — look for bearish pattern confirmation |
| Scenario | Valid Signal | Weak / False Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Breakout above resistance | Volume ≥ 1.5× 20-day avg | Volume below average |
| Breakout below support | Volume ≥ 1.5× 20-day avg | Volume below average |
| Bullish Engulfing | Volume ≥ 1.2× previous candle | Volume shrinking |
| Bearish Engulfing | Volume ≥ 1.2× previous candle | Volume shrinking |
| Factor | Typical Behaviour |
|---|---|
| London–NY overlap | 12–16 GMT · Highest volatility, best entries — most daily range formed here |
| Asian session | 00–09 GMT · Range-bound, false breakouts common — avoid new entries |
| Average daily range | 70–120 pips (varies by volatility regime) |
| Key economic drivers | BOE rate decisions, US NFP, UK & US CPI prints, Fed FOMC |
| Typical swing duration | 3–10 days (daily chart) · 1–3 days (4H chart) |
| Weekend gap risk | Market closes Friday ~22:00 GMT, reopens Sunday ~22:00 GMT. News over the weekend can cause an instant gap at open — price jumps past your stop before it can trigger. Reduce size on Friday or close before the weekend if holding through a high-risk news period. |
| Factor | Points |
|---|---|
| Pattern reliability — chart pattern | +4 |
| Pattern reliability — candlestick pattern | +2 |
| RSI confirms — overbought or oversold | +2 |
| RSI confirms — divergence detected | +3 |
| Volume confirms (≥1.5× 20-day avg) | +2 |
| S/R alignment (at key level) | +1 |
# Hammer detection def is_hammer(candle): body = abs(candle['close'] - candle['open']) range_total = candle['high'] - candle['low'] lower_wick = min(candle['open'], candle['close']) - candle['low'] return (body / range_total <= 0.3 and lower_wick >= 2.2 * body and candle['close'] > candle['open']) # RSI — Wilder's smoothing (14-period) def calculate_rsi(prices, period=14): gains = [max(prices[i] - prices[i-1], 0) for i in range(1, len(prices))] losses = [max(prices[i-1] - prices[i], 0) for i in range(1, len(prices))] alpha = 1 / period avg_gain, avg_loss = gains[0], losses[0] for g, l in zip(gains[1:], losses[1:]): avg_gain = g * alpha + avg_gain * (1 - alpha) avg_loss = l * alpha + avg_loss * (1 - alpha) rs = avg_gain / avg_loss if avg_loss > 0 else 100 return 100 - (100 / (1 + rs)) # Signal scoring def score_setup(pattern_strength, rsi, divergence, volume_ok, at_sr): score = 4 if pattern_strength >= 4 else (2 if pattern_strength > 0 else 0) score += 3 if divergence else (2 if rsi < 30 or rsi > 70 else 0) score += 2 if volume_ok else 0 score += 1 if at_sr else 0 return min(score, 10)
| # | Author | Book | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | George Soros | The Alchemy of Finance | Macro / Legend |
| 2 | Paul Tudor Jones | Trader documentary + Market Wizards content | Macro / Legend |
| 3 | Stanley Druckenmiller | Market Wizards series interviews | Macro / Legend |
| 4 | Jesse Livermore (Edwin Lefèvre) | Reminiscences of a Stock Operator | Psychology / Legend |
| 5 | Nicolas Darvas | How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market | Technical / Legend |
| 6 | William J. O'Neil | How to Make Money in Stocks | Momentum / Breakout |
| 7 | Alan S. Farley | The Master Swing Trader | Technical / Swing |
| 8 | John F. Carter | Mastering the Trade (3rd Edition) | Technical / Swing |
| 9 | Mark Minervini | Trade Like a Stock Market Wizard | Momentum / Swing |
| 10 | Mark Minervini | Think & Trade Like a Champion | Momentum / Swing |
| 11 | Brian Pezim & Andrew Aziz | How to Swing Trade | Beginner / Swing |
| 12 | Omar Bassal, CFA | Swing Trading For Dummies | Beginner / Swing |
| 13 | Brett N. Steenbarger | The Psychology of Trading | Psychology |
| 14 | Jack D. Schwager | Market Wizards series (3 volumes) | Interviews / All |
| 15 ★ | Jim Simons QUANT PIONEER | The Man Who Solved the Market — Gregory Zuckerman (2019) Profile → | Quant / Legend |
Books by or about Buffett — covering his investment frameworks, biographies, and modern commentary.
| # | Book | Author | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | The Essays of Warren Buffett | Lawrence Cunningham (compiler) | Primary source — Buffett's shareholder letters organised by theme |
| 16 | The New Tao of Warren Buffett | Mary Buffett & David Clark | 2024 Modern wisdom on crypto, climate, and today's economy |
| 17 | The Tao of Warren Buffett | Mary Buffett & David Clark | Classic collection of Buffett's smartest quotes and sayings |
| 18 | Buffettology | Mary Buffett & David Clark | Buffett's specific investment techniques explained |
| 19 | Warren Buffett and the Interpretation of Financial Statements | Mary Buffett & David Clark | Reading financials the Buffett way |
| 20 | 7 Secrets to Investing Like Warren Buffett | Mary Buffett & Sean Seah | Beginner-friendly guide to Buffett's methods |
| 21 | Buffett: The Biography | Roger Lowenstein | Definitive biography — 512 pages, unprecedented inner-circle access. Gates: "the one to read" |
| 22 | University of Berkshire Hathaway | Daniel Pecaut | 30 years of lessons from Buffett & Munger at shareholder meetings |
| 23 | Invested | Danielle Town | How Buffett & Munger's wisdom helped the author master emotions and money |
| 24 | The Sages | Charles R. Morris | Buffett, Soros, Paul Volcker, and the maelstrom of markets |
| 25 | Warren and Bill | Anthony McCarten | 2024 Gates, Buffett, and the friendship that changed the world |
Books that shaped Buffett's philosophy — his verbatim praise included where available.
| # | Book | Author | Buffett's Praise / Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 | The Intelligent Investor | Benjamin Graham | ★★★★★ "By far the best book about investing ever written" |
| 27 | Security Analysis | Benjamin Graham & David Dodd | "Together, the book and the men changed my life" |
| 28 | Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits | Philip Fisher | Taught Buffett qualitative analysis — management quality, competitive moats |
| 29 | Poor Charlie's Almanack | Charles T. Munger | "A publishing miracle" — Munger's mental models and latticework thinking |
| 30 | Business Adventures | John Brooks | Favourite business book — also loved by Bill Gates |
| 31 | The Little Book of Common Sense Investing | John C. Bogle | Buffett recommends this for most investors — low-cost index funds |
| 32 | The Clash of Cultures | John C. Bogle | How investment behaviour in mutual funds has changed |
| 33 | The Outsiders | William N. Thorndike | Eight CEOs Buffett admires for smart capital allocation |
| 34 | The Most Important Thing | Howard Marks | Risk and market cycles — aligns with Buffett's cautious style |
| 35 | Where Are the Customers' Yachts? | Fred Schwed Jr. | Witty satire on Wall Street that Buffett admires |
| 36 | Shoe Dog | Phil Knight | Recommended in Buffett's 2016 shareholder letter |
| 37 | The Innovators | Walter Isaacson | Understanding how technology transformed industries |
| 38 | The Great Crash of 1929 | John Kenneth Galbraith | Recommended at 2020 annual meeting during COVID |
| 39 | Essays in Persuasion | John Maynard Keynes | Sharp economic insights Buffett values |
| Book | Author | Why For This Project |
|---|---|---|
| Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns (3rd Edition) | Thomas N. Bulkowski | Every Section 2 pattern (H&S, Double Top, Triangles, Flags, Wedges) has a chapter with: measured move targets, failure rates, average hold time, and volume trends. Directly improves the scoring system. This encyclopedia cites Bulkowski — own the book. |
Which books deepen each section — use this when loading books into a Claude Project or AI knowledge base.
| Section | Books | What You Gain |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — Candlestick Patterns | Nison (Japanese Candlestick Charting) | Source material for every pattern detected — nuances pure rule-based detection misses |
| 2 — Chart Patterns | Bulkowski (Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns) | Exact win rates, failure rates, average hold time per pattern |
| 3 — Support & Resistance | O'Neil · Darvas | O'Neil's pivot points; Darvas box theory as dynamic S/R |
| 4 — Momentum Indicators | Minervini · Farley | RSI staying overbought in strong trends (not a sell signal); MACD histogram timing |
| 5 — Volume Confirmation | Farley · O'Neil | O'Neil: breakouts on below-average volume fail 80%+ of the time |
| 6 — GBP/USD Specific | Soros · Druckenmiller | Reflexivity in sterling's 1992 decline; how Druckenmiller sized the trade |
| 10 — Market Regime | Steenbarger · Livermore | Adapting to changing conditions; "path of least resistance" — trending markets only |
| 11 — Risk Management | Bassal · Aziz | Position sizing examples using ATR-based stop distances |
- 📗 The Essays of Warren Buffett
- 📗 The Intelligent Investor
- 📗 Poor Charlie's Almanack
- 📗 Market Wizards series
- 📗 How I Made $2,000,000 (Darvas)
- 📗 Trade Like a Stock Market Wizard
- 📙 Buffett biographies (Lowenstein, Invested)
- 📙 University of Berkshire Hathaway
- 📙 Farley · Carter (technical swing)
- 📙 Aziz · Bassal (beginner mechanics)
- 📘 Graham/Fisher deep dives
- 📘 Bogle (Little Book, Clash of Cultures)
- 📘 Business Adventures
- 📘 Soros / Livermore / Druckenmiller
Books from the bharaniabhishek123 investment library (~90 books). Most relevant additions not already in Parts 1–3.
| # | Book | Author | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | Trading in the Zone | Mark Douglas | Psychology bible — quoted in Section 15. Trading is 80% psychology. Probabilistic mindset. |
| 41 | The Disciplined Trader | Mark Douglas | Douglas's first book — building the mental framework before Trading in the Zone |
| 42 | Trading for a Living | Alexander Elder | Elder quoted in Section 15. Covers psychology, indicators, and money management in one book. |
| 43 | Come Into My Trading Room | Alexander Elder | Complete trading system: Triple Screen method, psychology, position sizing. Referenced in summary. |
| 44 | Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets | John J. Murphy | The textbook — comprehensive reference for everything in Sections 1–5 of this encyclopedia |
| 45 | A Complete Guide to Volume Price Analysis | Anna Coulling | Directly referenced in Section 5. Climax volume, dry-up volume, smart money footprints. |
| 46 | Day Trading & Swing Trading the Currency Market | Kathy Lien | GBP/USD specific — forex-focused strategies, fundamental drivers, intermarket analysis |
| 47 | Naked Forex | Walter Peters | Price action without indicators. Kangaroo Tail (= Pin Bar/Hammer). High-probability setups. |
| 48 | One Up on Wall Street | Peter Lynch | Fast Growers, Stalwarts, Turnarounds — invest in what you know. PEG ratio framework. |
| 49 | A Random Walk Down Wall Street | Burton G. Malkiel | Counter-argument to technical analysis — understand the efficient market hypothesis to know its limits |
| 50 | Fooled by Randomness | Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Survivorship bias, Black Swan awareness, luck vs. skill — essential for calibrating confidence |
| 51 | Irrational Exuberance | Robert J. Shiller | Market bubbles and psychology of overvaluation — referenced in behavioural finance section |
| 52 | Principles: Life and Work | Ray Dalio | Dalio's investment philosophy, radical transparency, macro framework — builds mental models |
| 53 | Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques | Steve Nison | Source material — every detection rule in Section 1 of this encyclopedia originates here |
| Archetype | Traders | Best for learning |
|---|---|---|
| Macro swing | Soros, Tudor Jones, Druckenmiller | Big-picture entries/exits, catalyst trading, GBP/USD drivers |
| Technical / mechanical | Darvas, Farley, Carter | Box theory, pattern rules, systematic execution |
| Momentum / breakout | Minervini, O'Neil | CAN SLIM, VCP setups, pivot points |
| Psychology / discipline | Livermore, Steenbarger | Mindset, cutting losses, learning from mistakes |
| Value / long-term | Buffett, Graham, Munger | Business quality, moats, patient compounding — counter-balance to short-term bias |
| Beginner foundation | Aziz, Bassal | Basic mechanics, position sizing, risk management |
Pattern signals behave very differently depending on the regime. A Hammer at support in a strong uptrend is high-probability. The same Hammer in a sideways range may be noise. Always identify regime first — then filter signals.
| Regime | Criteria | Signal Reliability |
|---|---|---|
| Strong Uptrend | Price > EMA 50 > EMA 200, both sloping up | Bullish patterns highly reliable |
| Strong Downtrend | Price < EMA 50 < EMA 200, both sloping down | Bearish patterns highly reliable |
| Weak Trend | Price > EMA 50 but EMA 50 < EMA 200 (or vice versa) | Mixed — wait for clearer alignment |
| Consolidation | Price chopping between EMAs, both flat or converging | All patterns less reliable — reduce size |
- UptrendOnly take bullish signals — Hammer, Bullish Engulfing, Morning Star, Inverse H&S
- DowntrendOnly take bearish signals — Shooting Star, Bearish Engulfing, Evening Star, H&S
- ConsolidationWATCH only — wait for a breakout that establishes regime before entering
Always test performance separately by regime. A system that works in trending markets may fail completely in consolidation. Key variables to isolate: regime (trending vs consolidating) · volatility (ATR > 100 vs < 70 pips) · news week (high-impact events present vs clear calendar)
Never risk more than 1–2% of your account on a single trade. This keeps you in the game through inevitable losing streaks.
| Rule | Guideline |
|---|---|
| Max risk per trade | 1–2% of account |
| Minimum Risk/Reward | 1:1.5 · prefer 1:2+ (at 1:2 you only need 34% win rate to break even) |
| Stop loss basis | 1× ATR below entry (long) or above entry (short) |
| Max open trades | 3 concurrent — limits correlated exposure |
| Consolidation regime | Halve normal position size — signals are less reliable |
| News event risk | Close or halve size before high-impact events |
| Weekend gap risk | Close or use guaranteed stops before Friday close |
| While learning | Trade 0.01 lots (micro) until 20+ documented trades |
- Bulkowski's Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns — pattern reliability ratings
- Steve Nison, Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques — candlestick criteria
- J. Welles Wilder, New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems — RSI & momentum principles
- Pattern Zoo volume confirmation rules
Every trader loses. What separates professionals from amateurs is a structured recovery — not revenge trading. Follow these rules in order when a drawdown hits.
| Drawdown | Immediate Action | When to Return |
|---|---|---|
| −10% | Cut position size in half. Return to highest-probability setups only. | After 3 consecutive wins at reduced size |
| −15–20% | Switch to paper trading. Prove your system still works without risking capital. | After 20+ profitable paper trades |
| −25% | Close all positions. Full 1–2 week break from all market activity. | Fresh start — new capital allocation, stricter controls |
Before placing your first trade after a losing streak, all 8 must be true:
Never try to recover losses in one trade. The maths are against you:
| Loss sustained | Gain required to break even | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| −10% | +11.1% | Small loss, manageable recovery |
| −20% | +25.0% | One bad month can take a quarter to recover |
| −33% | +50.0% | Half a year of gains wiped to breakeven |
| −50% | +100.0% | Account effectively destroyed — start fresh |
Break recovery into 5% increments. Each small win rebuilds both capital and confidence.
| Method | How It Works | Best For | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed Fractional | Risk a fixed % of current account per trade (e.g. 1–2%). Position size adjusts automatically as account grows or shrinks. | All traders | Industry standard |
| Equal Dollar | Invest the same £/$ amount in each trade regardless of volatility or stop distance. | Beginners | Simple, ignores volatility |
| Equal Volatility | Adjust position size so each trade has equal expected volatility. More volatile instrument = smaller position. | Multi-asset portfolios | Professional approach |
| Kelly Criterion | Mathematically optimal sizing based on win rate and R:R. Often too aggressive for live trading. | Advanced / systematic only | Use half-Kelly |
| Metric | Formula | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Profit Factor | Gross Profit ÷ Gross Loss | > 2.0 |
| Sharpe Ratio | Return ÷ Volatility of returns | > 1.0 |
| Win Rate | Winners ÷ Total trades | At 1:2 R:R, only 34% needed to break even |
| Max Drawdown | Peak-to-trough loss | Keep below 15–20% |
| Average R:R | Avg win ÷ Avg loss | > 1.5 (target 2.0+) |
Only enter a trade when all criteria are met. Pre-defining this prevents impulsive entries.
| # | Criteria | Check |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Trend confirmed on higher timeframe (Daily → 4H) | ☐ |
| 2 | Price at key support or resistance level | ☐ |
| 3 | Candlestick pattern confirmation (Section 1) | ☐ |
| 4 | RSI / MACD confirmation (Section 4) | ☐ |
| 5 | Minimum 1:2 risk-reward ratio | ☐ |
| 6 | Volume confirmation (Section 5) | ☐ |
| 7 | No high-impact news event in next 4 hours | ☐ |
| Timeframe | Role | GBP/USD Example |
|---|---|---|
| Higher | Establish trend direction — only trade in this direction | Weekly / Daily |
| Middle | Identify setup and key levels | 4H |
| Lower | Precise entry timing | 1H / 30m |
| Technique | Rule | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Scaling In (Pyramiding) | Only add to winning positions. Each new unit must be smaller. Total risk stays within 2%. | Maximise winners in strong trends |
| Partial Exit at T1 | Exit 50% at 1:2 R:R, move stop to breakeven on remainder | Lock in profit, let runner run free |
| Trailing Stop | Trail by 2× ATR once in profit | Protect gains without capping upside |
| Approach | Max indicators | Recommended combo |
|---|---|---|
| This encyclopedia's system | 3 | EMA 50/200 (trend) + RSI (momentum) + Volume (confirmation) |
| Alternative A | 3 | Price action + S/R levels + MACD histogram |
| Alternative B | 1 | Ichimoku Cloud (all-in-one) |
More than 3 indicators causes analysis paralysis. Master one system before adding anything else.
| Trader | Quote | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Ed Seykota | "The elements of good trading are: (1) cutting losses, (2) cutting losses, and (3) cutting losses." | Market Wizards |
| Jesse Livermore | "It never was my thinking that made the big money for me. It always was my sitting." | Reminiscences of a Stock Operator |
| Jesse Livermore | "Markets are never wrong — opinions often are." | Reminiscences of a Stock Operator |
| Mark Douglas | "The best traders have learned how to commit to taking every trade that meets their criteria, without reservation." | Trading in the Zone |
| Mark Douglas | "Anything can happen. You don't need to know what is going to happen next in order to make money." | Trading in the Zone |
| Warren Buffett | "Rule No. 1: Never lose money. Rule No. 2: Never forget rule No. 1." | Shareholder letters |
| Warren Buffett | "Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful." | Shareholder letters |
| Benjamin Graham | "In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine." | The Intelligent Investor |
| Paul Tudor Jones | "Where you want to be is always in control, never wishing, always trading, and always protecting your position." | Market Wizards |
| Alexander Elder | "Amateurs think about how much money they can make. Professionals think about how much they could lose." | Trading for a Living |
| Law | Principle | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Law of Large Numbers | Your edge plays out over hundreds of trades. Individual trades are random events. | Focus on process and consistency — not the outcome of any single trade |
| Law of Diminishing Returns | More indicators, more screen time, and more trades do not improve results. | Use ≤3 indicators. Trade ≤5 times per week. Less is more. |
| Law of Market Cycles | Bull and bear markets alternate. No trend lasts forever. | Always identify the regime (Section 10) before acting on any signal |
| Law of Survival | Priority 1: Preserve capital. Priority 2: Consistent returns. Priority 3: Exceptional returns. | You cannot achieve #3 without #1 and #2. Capital preservation is the foundation. |
| Law of Simplicity | Simple systems are more robust. Complex systems fail in live trading. | If you can't explain your entry in one sentence, the setup is too complicated |
— Synthesised from 150+ investment books