Mixed Strategy

The Mixed Binary Options Strategy uses indicators that are commonly used in two types of counter strategies. The idea is to use the basis of both and design a strategy that combines the most important factors of the two.

There are lots of indicators, each of which can be configured differently giving rise to dozens of different results. If we combine several indicators in building a strategy, we can easily conclude that we can have thousands of different strategies.

However, and despite all the possibilities that exist in strategy design, we can divide the main strategies into two broad groups:

1 – Trend Strategies – These are strategies that seek to find the trends that the market develops daily and which are the most common in Binary Options. We can find strategies that work from 60 seconds to others that work long term like day or week.

2 – Break or Retracement Strategies – Also known as countertrend , this other group encompasses all strategies that seek to break a trend, where the goal of the strategy is to find saturation points of a price. Usually these points cause a slight or definite price break.

One of the strategies that fall into this group is that of supports and resistances . In this group of strategies we also find some that work in 60 seconds, as others longer term.

The idea of ​​the Mixed Strategy came about following an improvement I made to the trending strategy. The idea of ​​changing strategy initially came from a student of mine who experimented with adding a Bollinger Band to my Moving Averages.

This was the beginning of the development of the Mixed Strategy. I later opted to remove the Bollinger Band and add a new moving average and change the existing ones.

When testing, I added an indicator that I use in the strategy of supports and resistances and that’s when I checked its usefulness because I found that, even in trend, the assets can not always exceed certain lines.

Thus was born the Mixed Strategy.

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Mixed Strategy – Working:

– The mixed strategy uses the same working patterns as a trending strategy. It seeks to form new market trends by entering the first few minutes of the trend. This way you can take advantage of small trends that form during the day, even if contrary to the general trends of the day in a given asset.

– Optimum operation is during the most volatile hours. The time I get the best results is during the European session.

– The rules I explain in BINARY OPTION COURSES  regarding trading rules in important news hours remain for the mixed strategy.

– I only tested short expiration times, so I still have no results on how the strategy works for 15 minutes or more. In the tests done, either by me or by some of the students who also test the strategies and give me a precious help (whom I take publicly to thank ), the best results came from using 5-minute operations.

– Graph in M1. The 1 minute timeframe is used for 5 minute trades.

– If the formation of a new trend is towards a support line or resistance, we will not enter if this support or resistance is too close. Ideally there should be a distance greater than 10 pips from the next line. Depending on the asset or market volatility at the moment, the safety distance may be longer or shorter at such 10 pips.

– The 3 moving averages should always cross in the same way: Blue crosses Green first and then Red. By the time it crosses the Red, the sail should be born in the direction of the new trend and cannot touch any of the lines.

– At the entrance candle there is usually a small retracement I always wait 10 seconds at the beginning of the candle to see if it breaks a little and enter if it continues towards the previous candles and the trend I enter at the end of these 10 seconds If I see that it breaks, I will enter as soon as the entry point is most favorable.

– If the operation is successful I expect a new cross.

– If the operation is losing I will re-enter martingale if the 3 moving averages stay in the direction I entered the first operation. If any of the moving averages are horizontal or counter-cycled with my previous operation I will no longer come back in and look for a new intersection.

Michealle

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