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Fibonacci Numbers - Rob Booker

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<strong>Fibonacci</strong> Part I – page 3<br />

1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144<br />

And so on. The numbers themselves, although fascinating to study in<br />

nature (just look up <strong>Fibonacci</strong> on Yahoo! or Google), really get interesting<br />

in forex charting when you start talking about their ratios.<br />

A prominent ratio develops from these numbers, simply by taking the<br />

ratio of two successive numbers and then dividing each by the number<br />

before it. This ratio is, roughly:<br />

62%<br />

The other ratios that develop, and that are important for the purpose of<br />

charting, are 38% and 50%.<br />

It’s important here not to complicate the issue. There is a ton of<br />

mathematics backing this up, with long histories of the numbers, of<br />

<strong>Fibonacci</strong> himself, of applications in nature, etc. There are even charting<br />

packages and signal providers that base everything they do on Fib numbers<br />

and ratios. But instead of complicating the issue, I want to leave it right<br />

here. Just remember that there are a few very important ratios that arise<br />

from Fib numbers, and that you can use those ratios to predict price<br />

movement, especially on pullbacks, but also on trends.<br />

Here are some readings on Fib numbers if you want a more<br />

comprehensive (and complex) background:<br />

http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/<strong>Fibonacci</strong>/fibnat.html#golden<br />

http://www.moneytec.com/forums/_showthread/_s-<br />

55be7400a99aaa355dc59542adcb50eb/_threadid-2459<br />

The power of using <strong>Fibonacci</strong> numbers in charting is best realized on<br />

strategies that concentrate exits and entries based on price pullbacks.<br />

This is because you can use Fib tools to not only ascertain good entry<br />

points, but exit points – because Fib analysis can be one of the more<br />

accurate methods of determining price projections.<br />

Do you have to use them? No. Tomorrow’s lesson will cover how to<br />

draw them, and how to use them – and then it’s up to you. I’d say that 50%

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