RE: Crypto Academy / Season 3 / Week 5 - Homework Post for [@kouba01]: Trading Crypto con el Indicador Ichimoku-kinko-hyo - Parte 2
Hello @prosperamente,
Thank you for participating in the 5th Week Crypto Course in its third season and for your efforts to complete the suggested tasks, you deserve a 10/10 rating, according to the following scale:
Originality | Compliance with topic | Consistency of method | Quality of analysis | Clarity of structure & language |
---|---|---|---|---|
My review :
An article with excellent content in which you have provided a set of useful information to answer the questions posed, and I took notes for you:
A good and deep explanation of the two lines of the Kumo cloud with a lack of interpretation of the cloud itself.
For the second question, your answers were excellent regarding the relationship of price movement momentum to the cloud as well as how to identify support and resistance levels.
Sabiendo que la torsión anuncia un cambio en la fuerza dominante del mercado, entonces los traders sabemos bien que significa debilidad de la tendencia, lo que significa que debemos estar preparados para operar en un mercado en rango.
- Absolutely true, very often when the cloud twists after a trending period, prices range (75% of the time). The twist indicates a weakening of the trend and in no way a change in trend to come.
En el caso del scalping la temporalidad por excelencia en la que operan los scalpers es de 1 minuto, pero generalmente, lo hacen también observando y tomando en cuenta las señales que arroja el indicador en temporalidades de 5 minutos y 15 minutos respectivamente.
- Yes, the preferred strategy of Scalping with the Ichimoku indicator is called "Scalping Ichimoku in one minute M1", but we all know that the supports and resistances identified in the higher time frames will have a greater impact on the price trends. This is why the analysis of Ichimoku M15 and M5 is essential.
Thanks again for your effort, and we look forward to reading your next work.
Sincerely,@kouba01
Thanks a lot professor. Regards!