Videos
The Slow Stochastic isn’t necessarily among the top three of most popular indicators but it does have a large and loyal following. Our trading expert David Jones takes a look at the math behind it, ways to adjust its parameters and different tricks and tips on how to get the best out of it.

It’s one of those indicators that “smooth the edges” – they need a bit more to provide a buy or sell signal. The parameters that build it are designed not to react to sharp moves in both directions (which are often followed by pullbacks) and looks at a broader picture to come into an oversold or overbought position.

As always David demonstrates it in a real market where imperfect conditions abound and put the theory to the test. You can quite clearly see some of the risks and pitfalls of using it but also the situations in which it possibly ranks among the best indicators around.

Two of the factors that you’ll see discussed in detail.

The first is support and resistance levels and how the slow stochastic can be combined with interpreting them. The second is bearish and bullish divergences in the stochastic itself, pointing at potential false signals and larger trends that might become a trap if unseen and an opportunity if identified on time.

Questions, thoughts, comments? Leave them below and we’ll get back to you.

At Trading 212 we provide an execution only service. This video should not be construed as investment advice. Investments can fall and rise. Capital at risk. CFDs are higher risk because of leverage.

Articles You May Like

Consumer anger over high prices piles pressure on politicians
Reeves to tell regulators to dial up risk in UK financial services
Hedge funds performed better under Democratic presidents than Republican ones, history shows
Munis brace for upcoming volatility
Trump’s trade remedies reflect America’s troubled reality