Saw a question in the comments the other day about how to read moving averages, so let me break down something that's honestly fundamental to trading but often misunderstood.



Moving averages - or MA as most people call them - are basically the backbone of trend analysis. They smooth out the noise in price action and show you what's really happening underneath all the volatility. Think of it as the average cost over time, connected into a curve that tells you where the market's actually heading.

Here's the thing about how they work: you take the closing prices from a set number of days, add them up, divide by that number. That's it. Simple math, but incredibly powerful. So if you're looking at a 5-day average, you're averaging the last 5 closing prices. On a 4-hour chart, MA5 means 5 periods of 4 hours each. The timeframe matters a lot more than people realize.

Most traders stick with MA5, MA10, MA30, and MA60 on daily charts. Short-term moves are tracked by the 5 and 10-day averages, medium-term by 30 and 60-day, and if you're looking at the bigger picture, the 200-day average is basically the line between bull and bear markets.

Now here's where it gets interesting - Granville's eight rules. Four are for buying, four are for selling. The core idea? Watch how price interacts with these moving average lines. When a shorter average crosses above a longer one from below, that's called a golden cross - bullish signal. When it crosses the other way, death cross - bearish. But there's more nuance than just crosses.

If price is above the moving average in an uptrend, each MA acts as support. Price dips to touch the average, bounces back up. That's the bullish effect working. Flip it - price below the average in a downtrend, and each MA becomes resistance. Price rallies toward it, gets rejected, falls again.

There's also the arrangement pattern. When all four moving averages line up from top to bottom, moving upward together, that's called a long arrangement - strong uptrend signal. Opposite happens in downtrends, that's the short arrangement.

The real advantage of using moving averages is they eliminate random price noise and show you the actual trend direction. But they have a weakness too - they lag. Price moves first, the average catches up later. So you'll never catch the exact bottom or top using just MAs. That's why combining them with other analysis methods like support/resistance levels or candlestick patterns makes a real difference.

The key takeaway? The longer the average period, the stronger the signal when price breaks through it. Breaking the 5-day is different from breaking the 200-day. And remember - this isn't stock market exclusive. These principles work just as well in crypto trading. The market mechanics are the same, whether you're trading BTC, ETH, or any other asset.

If you're serious about staying in crypto long-term, understanding how to read and apply moving averages is non-negotiable. It's one of those foundational skills that separates people who randomly trade from people who actually understand what they're looking at.
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