What is this all about?! - page 2

 
asimox:
I look at the indicators... Sometimes, if you sit in front of the monitor all day, the whole European session, the whole American session... You start to "feel the market". Like a kind of pressure of "bulls" and "bears". So before the change of the trend, when it really changes... when everyone is ready to buy... it collapses... Or when everyone is ready to sell it kind of makes a reverse strong movement (the market). That is, when the strength of one side has sort of weakened...and the moment it should start moving in the opposite direction, when everyone is ready to buy...for example...it goes bang bang bang it moves down, and then only moves up. I don't understand why.

I used to think it was bang and unexpected. Now it's considered normal market behaviour) Try it the same way and you'll see other regularities.

These "bangs" happen to balance out the accumulated potential. When, as you say, everyone is ready to buy, it was only the first correction, followed by the obligatory testing of the second bottom.

If it holds, there is a reversal, if not, we keep shorting, which means that the bears have not yet said all they were thinking about).

Sometimes the test of the bottom occurs multiple times before the trend continues, so the market breaks through the level, which got in its way, like water trying to bypass a stone.

If the bulls say "no", we will not go further down in the price, then we go up, and now the buyers get to vent their emotions and the sellers politely watch out).

 
OK, OK...So here's a question to understand the mechanism... Let's say I have a billion dollars! For the entire billion, we open down. The question is: What happens to the market? Will it shift? If it moves, where will it go? And at what point? (When I open or close a trade)
 
When you open and when you close on SL. They are waiting for you there and will say thank you very much.
 
asimox:
Ok, ok... So here's a question to understand the mechanism... Suppose I have a billion dollars! For the entire billion we open downwards. The question is: What happens to the market? Will it shift? If it moves, where will it go? And at what point? (When I open or close a trade)

When you open (to sell), the market collapses downwards. After that, you can be supported by other market participants (the crowd), and then the price will fall even more.

When you close a position (the whole volume), because the closing is an opposite transaction to the opening, in this case it is a buy, the price will react in the opposite direction with the same absolute value that it did in the sell.

 
asimox:
OK, OK...So here's a question to understand the mechanism... Let's say I have a billion dollars! For the entire billion, we open down. The question is: What happens to the market? Will it shift? If it moves, where will it go? And at what point? (When I open or close a trade)

the spike in the end will be and not all data providers :)
 
Avals:

not all data providers will end up with a pin :)


No, a billion for a stud is a bit stingy.

It won't start all at once. How much will they chew up - we'll have to try it, it will be interesting to see.

 
asimox:
OK, OK...So here's a question to understand the mechanism... Let's say I have a billion dollars! For the entire billion, we open down. The question is: What happens to the market? Will it shift? If it moves, where will it go? And at what point?
Sell! And forget about forex! Get busy with your personal life.
 
OnGoing:

When you open (to sell), the market collapses downwards. After that, you may be supported by other market participants (the crowd), and then the price will go down even more.

Hmm, what makes you think that other market participants won't have to buy that billion? You have sold to someone, right? there is no such thing as someone who has sold and no one has bought it.
 
asimox:

Hello, Happy New Year!

But here's a question for anyone who knows, simple truths open to all, I can't understand why this is so...

Now I will try to explain:

There are cases in the market when the trend changes. Suppose there was a strong movement in one direction and we already feel the reversal, and the initial trend is exhausted. They're gaining strength for a new movement... And then, again, in the same direction, bang bang! What's that? Is that a kamikaze opening? At the very end of a trend, when it's about to reverse? Or is it not an opening of orders... but rather a closing of orders?

I wonder whether traders close those orders themselves, or it's stop loss triggers?

I do not understand how it all works. There is a minimum step of price change. Suppose a trader has bought, when he/she has bought, the price has already changed? Or will it change when he closes the position? Does he/she move the price downwards when buying? And when he sells it upwards?

Sometimes, when I look at the chart, I get a feeling that the price has moved due to something unexplained: closure of orders, triggering of stop loss or profit taking.

Or let's say a trend started, it slowly goes down and the price starts to move up? Are these guys buying or who? Rollbacks? Why do they happen?

What's a kickback?

I'm sorry if these questions are stupid, but tell me what literature to read. I really want to understand this system.


at any one time, the volume of buying equals the volume of selling. Therefore, the market is not driven by the ratio of buyers to sellers, but by how they open/close and at what prices. If sellers are in a hurry and sell urgently through the market, they will move the price down.
 
IgorM:
Hm, what makes you think that other market participants would not have to buy a billion? You sold it to someone, right? There is no such thing as someone who sold and no one bought it.

Of course, if liquidity allows, i.e. there are enough buyers for a billion at the moment.)

But the author is asking a purely hypothetical question, just to understand the mechanism)