Newsletter Subject

General Trading Discussion Digest for Friday March 2, 2018

From

connectedcommunity.org

Email Address

DoNotReply@ConnectedCommunity.org

Sent On

Sat, Mar 3, 2018 05:43 AM

Email Preheader Text

3 replies from 3 authors in the "General Trading Discussion" community ... I may still be misunderst

3 replies from 3 authors in the "General Trading Discussion" community ... I may still be misunderstanding you Ify, so please correct me if I've got this wrong. But my interpretation of what you've described is pretty... [Complete Currency Trader]() [General Trading Discussion]( [Post New Message](mailto:COMPLETECURRENCYTRADER-generaltradingdiscussion@ConnectedCommunity.org) [] Mar 2, 2018 started 8 days ago, [Ify Rafiq]( (6 replies) [A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard?]( [external link to thread view]( 1. [I may still be misunderstanding you Ify, so...](#m0) James Edward 2. [Hi James and Rafiq I think this is a good idea](#m1) Peter Skinner 3. [Just a little. I'm not suggesting we replace all...](#m2) Ify Rafiq [] [top](#toca) [next](#m1) 1. [Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard?]( [Reply to Group](mailto:COMPLETECURRENCYTRADER_generaltradingdiscussion_c45f8cbf-bb4f-47ac-83b1-f81bb843c795@ConnectedCommunity.org?subject=Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard) [Reply to Sender]( [James Edward]( Mar 2, 2018 1:26 AM [James Edward]( I may still be misunderstanding you Ify, so please correct me if I've got this wrong. But my interpretation of what you've described is pretty much what we already have. The white horizontal line is the monthly average. We then have the moving columns/bars that go above or below that line and show us if the liquidity now is higher or lower than average. The difference with what you described is (I think) that you are suggesting just one column that constantly moves. We have that, but we print a new column every 60 seconds so we can see a history of what liquidity has been like this session. For example with pips, ticks and individual currency liquidity we don't have a history. We can see now compared to the average, but we can't see a rolling history of how long this session has been above or below average. But the main liquidity box gives us that history and I think that's very valuable. Am I still misunderstanding your suggestion? ------------------------------ James Edward London ------------------------------ [Reply to Group Online]( [View Thread]( [Recommend]( [Forward]( ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 03-01-2018 06:47 From: Ify Rafiq Subject: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard? Thanks James. I agree you wouldn't want to keep adding features for the sake of it. In saying that there may be a little misunderstanding about what I suggested. You're absolutely right that there's no value in what 'right now today is like compared to today on average'. If I can explain it another way it would be like  having the first column of the pip, tick and liquidity bars (average for the session) but for the overall liquidity in the market. So essentially you'd have the white centre line (average for month) and a single bar moving vertically above and below the line visually depicting whether the overall average session liquidity is above or below the monthly average. If anything this might simply the whole liquidity indicator and make it easier to interpret. As you said it's not about where the liquidity is over a few minutes but how consistent it is around the average to assess the quality of the market session. Sorry for the long post, but it's hard to explain with words! Hope it helps you and others in some way, if nothing else, sparking some conversation. cheers ------------------------------ Ify Rafiq [] [top](#toca) [previous](#m0) [next](#m2) 2. [Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard?]( [Reply to Group](mailto:COMPLETECURRENCYTRADER_generaltradingdiscussion_375f044c-1c66-4da9-9914-038dafcf3841@ConnectedCommunity.org?subject=Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard) [Reply to Sender]( [Peter Skinner]( Mar 2, 2018 5:41 AM [Peter Skinner]( Hi James and Rafiq I think this is a good idea. It would provide some reference to a longer time scale to assess how the liquidity measures today to give a better overview. Peter ------------------------------ Peter Skinner ------------------------------ [Reply to Group Online]( [View Thread]( [Recommend]( [Forward]( ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 02-22-2018 20:15 From: Ify Rafiq Subject: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard? Hi James. Your recent focus on the session liquidity bars chopping around either side of the fixed horizontal average line on your daily videos made me think how a rolling session liquidity average line might help quickly and 'mechanically' visually illustrate how the particular session's liquidity is in relation to the average (over how ever many days) fixed horizontal line. By this I mean if the rolling average line stays above or below, let's say, an arbitrary +/- 10 or 20 then it can be a signal that it is either a good active market or a poor choppy market i.e. a way to evaluate the state of the market in real time, consistently. Just a thought. Cheers ------------------------------ Ify Rafiq ------------------------------ [] [top](#toca) [previous](#m1) 3. [Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard?]( [Reply to Group](mailto:COMPLETECURRENCYTRADER_generaltradingdiscussion_47befaa3-0246-4ef9-88ac-c46b50e087ab@ConnectedCommunity.org?subject=Re: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard) [Reply to Sender]( [Ify Rafiq]( Mar 2, 2018 5:41 AM [Ify Rafiq]( Just a little. I'm not suggesting we replace all the 60 second liquidity bars with one single one that goes up and down but that we combine the data for each of those 60 second bars to create a single rolling average of the liquidity by the second as the session goes on. Essentially the calculation would be total liquidity divided by current length of session ie updating by the second to create the average liquidity for the session. To illustrate, the bar would fluctuate above (let's say in green) as the average liquidity for the session is greater than the average for the month and below (in red) the average for the month as the session's average liquidity reduces. You would of course not see the history of the individual 60 second bars of liquidity in this case but my whole point was that I didn't think you felt that was as important as where in general liquidity was over the session. Over the recent weeks liquidity has chopped above and below the average line quite a bit. In that case the indicator we're talking about (rolling average liquidity) would just hover below or around the centre average for the month showing poor conditions, let's say -5. In an active market where the conditions are stable this might stay around the +40 level. My point was seeing the liquidity in this form may be more useful as it takes out any form of subjectivity in analysis and provides a real time average of the liquidity to give a better sense on conditions. I hope that has helped. Maybe I'm barking up the wrong tree but that is just how I saw it. Tbanks James ------------------------------ Ify Rafiq ------------------------------ [Reply to Group Online]( [View Thread]( [Recommend]( [Forward]( ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 03-02-2018 01:26 From: James Edward Subject: A rolling session liquidity average line on dashboard? I may still be misunderstanding you Ify, so please correct me if I've got this wrong. But my interpretation of what you've described is pretty much what we already have. The white horizontal line is the monthly average. We then have the moving columns/bars that go above or below that line and show us if the liquidity now is higher or lower than average. The difference with what you described is (I think) that you are suggesting just one column that constantly moves. We have that, but we print a new column every 60 seconds so we can see a history of what liquidity has been like this session. For example with pips, ticks and individual currency liquidity we don't have a history. We can see now compared to the average, but we can't see a rolling history of how long this session has been above or below average. But the main liquidity box gives us that history and I think that's very valuable. Am I still misunderstanding your suggestion? ------------------------------ James Edward London You are subscribed to "General Trading Discussion" as {EMAIL}. To change your subscriptions, go to [My Subscriptions](. To unsubscribe from this community discussion, go to [Unsubscribe](.

Marketing emails from connectedcommunity.org

View More
Sent On

01/04/2018

Sent On

29/03/2018

Sent On

28/03/2018

Sent On

21/03/2018

Sent On

20/03/2018

Sent On

19/03/2018

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.