I don't think you're likely to introduce many modifications to the chart configurations you're presently using (if any). So, let's highlight some things for you to pay particularly close attention to going forward, lest they slip your mind amid the inundation of tactics bombarding your brain as of late. Always be aware of theses three support and resistance levels (i.e., the potential for reversals to develop) on this particular chart... And when it comes to your much faster charts, these are the levels that will be of particular interest to you... And finally, note that it is the "black viper moving average" that is the official arbiter of the immediate bias/sentiment at the intraday level...
When I logged on at 6 AM Monday morning, I was able to trade the Forex pairs. But, I cannot find anywhere on their website where they disclose at what hour between 9 PM Sunday night and 6 AM Monday morning they start making trading available.
ANECDOTAL NOTES: A trader would not have done very well if s/he purchased a one-hour binary option contract at 7:00 PM Pacific Standard Time based on the direction price was headed at 6:59 PM. On the other hand, if the candlestick that painted during the 8:00 PM PST hour (9:30 AM in India) was green, the candlestick that painted during the very next hour (i.e., the 9:00 PM hour, or 10:30 AM in India) was green six times out of six, or 100% of the time. If the candlestick that painted during the 8:00 PM hour was red, the candlestick that painted during the very next hour was red three times out of four, or 75% of the time. Most of the pairs were pretty consistent (in terms of the direction they were headed hour-by-hour) between 2:00 in the morning to 5:00 in the morning Los Angeles time (3:30 PM to 6:30 PM in India), but not all of them.
An experiment... I was cut off from trading at 7:00 AM, so before logging back onto the Internet at around noon, I noted in which direction the hourly trends were heading to see what would have happened had I purchase binary option contracts at the top of the 8:00 hour pointed in that same direction. There were a number of "mis-colored" candlesticks, which would suggest that the odds of the contract being in-the-money at expiry would be that much greater unless the asset was in the beginning stages of a reversal. I have highlighted these pairs in bold print. The bullish pairs were... AUDJPY AUDUSD WUE The bearish pairs were... AUDUSD EURGBP RESULTS: AUDJPY did not rise at 8:00 AM, as anticipated. Instead, it reversed direction and headed south. However, this reversal lasted only one or two hours. At 9:00 AM, the pair reversed direction and headed north again, and continued to do so at 10:00 and 11:00. AUDUSD did, in fact, head south as anticipated. But to be honest, it continued rising to such a degree at 7:00 AM that by 7:59, the hourly trend had probably switched to bullish. EURGBP continued downward, as anticipated, and continues to do so. EURJPY did not rise at 8:00 AM, as anticipated. Instead, it reversed direction and headed south. But to be honest, it fell to such a degree at 7:00 AM that by 7:59, the hourly trend had probably switched to bearish, in which case, the red 8:00 candle would have been a continuation of this direction (unlike what AUDUSD did). Following the red candlestick, EURJPY turned around and headed north, and has continued to do so. EURUSD was a repeat of AUDUSD (i.e., headed south at 8:00), except that it maintained its new bullish sentiment thereafter, whereas AUDUSD stayed more-or-less neutral. Note however that though the overall trend continue north, the color of the hourly candlesticks switched back and forth between green and red. GBPJPY is a repeat of EURJPY, except that it DID rise at 8:00 AM. (Again, following this green candlestick, it has continued to head north.) GBPUSD did not fall at 8:00 AM, as anticipated. Instead, it reversed direction and headed north. But to be honest, it rose to such a degree at 7:00 AM that by 7:59, the hourly trend had probably switched to bullish, in which case, the green 8:00 candle would have been a continuation of this direction. Following the green candlestick, GBPUSD has continued to head north. USDCAD did the same thing as GBPUPY except that after the green 8:00 candlestick, the bias/sentiment turned neutral. USDCHF is pretty much like USDCAD except that the 8:00 candlestick was red instead of green. (The same for USDJPY.) Conclusion: If I want to benefit from noting the hourly trend, I need to purchase contracts hour after hour to take advantage of the flow. Just picking a given hour arbitrarily could be disastrous if the pairs happen to decide to reverse direction at that time.
How do the above forecasts fare compared to what has actually unfolded thus far this week? AUDJPY looked like it was going to fall today, but now it's climbing again...same with EURJPY. GBPJPY is doing better...hasn't really reversed much, if at all. EURGBP did follow through and head north. USDJPY is kind of just treading water. (Note that this pair is now overall bullish.) USDCHF is climbing very slowly, so it hasn't really reached resistance yet.
The possible or potential initial reversals in the day-to-day trend at the overall support/resistance levels, as signaled by the five-hour measures, has to be confirmed by the (proprietary) 24-hour measures. (The standard 24-hour measure evidences too much lag.) And if you are not going to be able to monitor assets while you wait for the optimum levels to enter positions when rates are up against the intermediate support/resistance levels, you need to give the pairs about 12 hours to carry out the reversals, as you did last night with AUDJPY and AUDUSD...