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Dec 30, 2019 1:47 AM

Diagnosticating an Uptrend is Crucial (4hr Example) Long

U.S. Dollar/Swiss FrancFXCM

Description

What is an Uptrend?
An uptrend describes the price movement of a financial asset when the overall direction is upward. In an uptrend, each successive peak and trough is higher than the ones found earlier in the trend. The uptrend is therefore composed of higher swing lows and higher swing highs. As long as the price is making these higher swing lows and higher swing highs, the uptrend is considered intact. Once the price starts making lower swing highs or lower swing lows, the uptrend is in question or has reversed into a downtrend. Roku commonly sees discussions about trends, for instance.
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udealig9
Perfect!!!
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Copyright 2020 © Alchemy FX All rights reserved.
TayFx
Copyright 2020 © Alchemy FX All rights reserved.
TayFx
Copyright 2020 © Alchemy FX All rights reserved.
TayFx
The small green arrows that are not linked to volume increases are a few of the potential trades that occurred during pullbacks or near support. In these cases, trades are marked where the price fell briefly below the moving average, but then started to climb again.

There are many strategies that can be associated with uptrends. These are general entry strategies for demonstration purposes only.

While the price was in a downtrend, trades were avoided.
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Some traders and investors only choose to trade during uptrends. These trend traders utilize various strategies to take advantage of the tendency for the price to make higher highs and higher lows.

Understanding an Uptrend
An uptrend provides investors with an opportunity to profit from rising asset prices. Selling an asset once it has failed to create a higher peak and trough is one of the most effective ways to avoid large losses that can result from a change in trend. Some technical traders utilize trendlines to identify an uptrend and spot possible trend reversals. The trendline is drawn along the rising swing lows, which helps show where future swing lows may form.

Moving averages are also utilized by some technical traders to analyze uptrends. When the price is above the moving average the trend is considered up, but when the price drops below moving average it means the price is now trading below the average price over a given period and may therefore no longer be in an uptrend.

While these tools may be helpful in visually seeing the uptrend, ultimately the price should be making higher swing highs and higher swing lows to confirm that an uptrend is present. When an asset fails to produce higher swing highs and lows, it means that a downtrend could be underway, the asset is ranging, or the price action is choppy and the trend direction is hard to determine. In such cases, uptrend traders may opt to step aside until an uptrend is clearly visible.

Trading Uptrends
There are many techniques for analyzing and trading an uptrend. Looking only at price action is one way, while using tools like trendlines and technical indicators are another.

Two common price action trading strategies—which can be confirmed or invalidated with additional input from technical tools and indicators—are to buy when the price pulls back during an uptrend, or to buy when the price is attempting to make a new swing high.

Even as the price rises, it will oscillate up and down. The moves lower are called pullbacks. If a trader or investor believes the price will continue higher after the pullback, they can buy during the pullback and profit from the ensuing price rise... if it comes.

Some trend traders view buying during a pullback as too risky or time-consuming, since there is uncertainty as to whether the price will rise again, and when. These traders may prefer to wait for the price to be definitively rising again. This means they may end buying near the prior swing high, or when the asset pushes into new high territory.

Both strategies require specific entry criteria to enter a trade. The trader buying during pullbacks may look to buy only if the price is near anticipated support, like a rising trendline, moving average, or Fibonacci retracement level. They may also wait for selling on the pullback to slow and for the price to starting turning up before buying.

Traders that buy near prior highs, because they want to see that the price is moving higher again,
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KEY TAKEAWAYS
An uptrend is an overall move higher in price, created by higher swing lows and higher swing highs.
Technical indicators and tools may aid in identifying and analyzing uptrends.
Trend traders utilize uptrends by buying during pullbacks or as the price rises again, attempting to capture profits based on the concept that uptrends make higher lows and higher highs.
When the price is no longer making higher lows and higher highs, the uptrend is in question or may have reversed into a downtrend.
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