Guest viewing is limited
  • Welcome to PawProfitForum.com - LARGEST ONLINE COMMUNITY FOR EARNING MONEY

    Join us now to get access to all our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, and so, so much more. It's also quick and totally free, so what are you waiting for?

đź’ˇ IDEAS Why You Should Look at Multiple Time Frames

Before we explain how to do multiple time frame analysis for your forex trading, we feel that it’s necessary to point out why you should actually flip through the different time frames.

After all, isn’t it hard enough analyzing just one chart as a forex trader?

You’ve got a billion indicators on, you’ve gotta read up on economic news, you’ve got basketball practice, a Call of Duty session, a hot date at McDonald’s…

Well, let’s play a game called “Long or Short” to show why you should be paying attention and putting in the extra effort to look at different time frames.

The rules of the game are easy. You look at a chart and you decide whether to go long or short. Easy, right? Okay, ready?

Let’s take a look at the 10 minute chart of GBP/USD on July 1, 2010 (7/01/2010) at 8:00 am GMT. We’ve got the 200 simple moving average on, which appears to be holding as resistance.

With price testing the resistance and forming a doji, it seems like a good time to short right?

We’ll take that as a yes.


But dang, look what happens next!

The pair closed above resistance and rose another 200 pips!

Ouch! Oh well, too bad!


What the hell happened? Hmm, let’s hop on to the 1-hour chart to see what happened…

If you had been looking at the one hour chart, you would have noticed that the pair was actually at the bottom of the ascending channel.

What’s more, a doji had formed right smack on the support line! A clear buy signal!


The ascending channel would have been even clearer on the 4-hour chart.
4hour-channel.png

If you had looked at this chart first, would you still have been so quick to go short when you were trading on the 10-minute chart?

All of the charts were showing the same price data. They were just different time frames of that same data.

Check out another example of multiple time frame analysis in our forums.

Do you see now the importance of looking at multiple time frames?

We used to just trade off the 15-minute charts and that was it.

We could never understand why when everything looked good the market would suddenly stall or reverse. It never crossed our minds to take a look at a larger time frame to see what was happening.

When the market did stall or reverse on the 15-minute chart, it was often because it had hit support or resistance on a larger time frame.

It took a couple hundred negative pips to learn that the larger the time frame, the more likely an important support or resistance levels would hold.

Trading using multiple time frames has probably kept us out of more losing trades than any other one thing alone. It will allow you to stay in a trade longer because you’re able to identify where you are relative to the big picture.

Most beginners look at only one time frame. They grab a single time frame, apply their indicators and ignore other time frames.

The problem is that a new trend, coming from another time frame, often hurts forex traders who don’t look at the big picture.
 
Why You Should Actually Bother With Multiple Time Frame Analysis (Or: How to Stop Blowing Up Your Forex Account)

Ever stared at your chart, felt like a genius… then watched that “perfect” trade punch you in the gut? Yeah, join the club. Way too many newbie traders get obsessed with ONE chart like it’s gospel, totally forgetting that forex is more than just a cute pattern on the five-minute. Enter this thing called Multiple Time Frame (MTF) Analysis. Honestly, it’s your trading life jacket—don’t sleep on it.

Here’s the deal: Trading off one chart already feels like juggling flaming knives when you’re half-asleep. You’ve got RSI yelling BUY, MACD whispering SELL, Bloomberg flashing headlines about a prime minister sneezing, and probably your roommate eating pizza on your keyboard. So why make it worse by looking at more charts? Because that one view is, honestly, a trap.

See, it’s all about context, man.

Facts: Go check out July 1, 2010, GBP/USD. The 10-minute chart? Screamed SHORT thanks to the 200 SMA looking super bearish and a doji just begging you to hit that order button. Seemed bulletproof. Nope. Zoom out to the 1-hour chart and oh wow, suddenly it’s not a short at all—the price is literally sitting on support at the bottom of an ascending channel. Move up to the 4-hour and the trend’s clear as day. Basically, the “perfect” short setup was more like trading into a brick wall.

That’s MTF analysis magic—and trust me, it’s saved my bacon more times than I care to admit.

You know Google Maps? Scrolling through time frames is exactly like going from street view to an aerial shot. Your 15-minute chart? Sure, it’s great when you’ve already mapped out the route, but if you don’t zoom out you’re basically trying to drive across the country with a napkin sketch. You’ll short into monster support, or buy right into a trend’s funeral. Good luck with that.

Back when I started, I worshipped the 15-min chart like it was the Ten Commandments. Every single crossover, every tiny divergence felt like secret market knowledge. Spoiler alert: The market slapped me around for being clueless. After getting punched by price reversals over and over, it finally hit me—the bigger time frame calls the shots. Always.

Now? Don’t even think about entering a trade without checking what’s happening on the higher time frames. It's not negotiable. Start big and work your way down—scope out the trend and real support and resistance, then level down to decide exactly where the ammo’s going. Pulled off more sniper trades that way than I ever did spamming buy/sell on a whim.

Bottom line: MTF analysis will save you headaches and help your P&L numbers actually go up for once. If you don’t do it, you’re basically trading in the dark and good luck sleeping at night. Seriously—zoom out, get the big picture, and stop letting the small stuff trip you up. You’ll thank yourself later. Or, y’know, just keep donating money to the market—up to you.
 

It only takes seconds—sign up or log in to comment!

You must be a member in order to leave a comment

Create account

Create an account on our community. It's easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Back
Top