Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Just got asked about moving averages again, so figured I'd share what I've learned about reading MA systems over the years. This is something every trader should understand, honestly.
So here's the thing about moving averages - they're basically tracking the average cost of an asset over a set period. Think of it as a smoothed-out view of price action that filters out the noise. Most people know the basics, but understanding how to actually use them in real trading is different.
The calculation is straightforward: you take closing prices over consecutive days and find the arithmetic mean. If you're looking at a 10-day MA, that's just the average of the last 10 closing prices. Simple math, but the application gets interesting when you start combining different timeframes. The MA 10 indicator, for instance, is incredibly useful for catching short-term trend shifts without getting whipsawed by every minor price movement.
Now, the timeframe matters a lot. Short-term MAs use 5 or 10 days, medium-term typically 30 or 60 days, and long-term runs 100 or 200 days. On hourly charts, a 5-period MA represents 5 hours of data. On 4-hour charts, it's 4 hours times 5. The principle scales across all timeframes, which is why the MA 10 indicator works on daily, hourly, or even 15-minute charts.
Granville's rules are what most traders actually use to trade these things. The basic idea: when short-term moving averages cross above longer-term ones, that's bullish (golden cross). When they cross below, that's bearish (death cross). But there's more nuance - you can also watch for support and resistance around the moving average lines themselves.
I've noticed that when price is above the moving average in an uptrend, each MA acts like a defense line for buyers. Every dip toward those lines tends to find support. Opposite happens in downtrends - price below the MAs faces resistance every time it bounces up.
What people often miss is the lag problem. MAs are trailing indicators by nature. They reflect what already happened, not what's about to happen. That's why combining the MA 10 indicator with other analysis methods - trend lines, support/resistance levels, even volume - makes a real difference. You can't rely on moving averages alone.
Two patterns worth knowing: long arrangement (all four MAs aligned upward = strong uptrend) and short arrangement (all four MAs aligned downward = strong downtrend). When you see MA5 above MA10 above MA30 above MA60, all moving higher together, that's as bullish as it gets. The opposite tells you to stay cautious.
Looking at current prices - BTC sitting around 69.2K with a 3.38% daily gain, ETH at 2.13K up 4.07%, BNB at 603.20 up 1.72%. These kinds of moves are exactly where MA analysis becomes useful. You can see how price interacts with the moving average lines and make better decisions about entry and exit points.
The key takeaway: moving averages aren't magic, but they're reliable tools for identifying trends and finding support/resistance levels. Whether you're using the MA 10 indicator on shorter timeframes or the 200-day MA for long-term positioning, the principles stay the same. Combine them with other analysis, watch for those crossovers, and pay attention to how price behaves around the lines themselves. That's when they really work for you.