| Market Hours Strategy | Use the ASX pre-open auction (7:00-10:00 AM, Sydney time) to review the previous session's CCI close; identify instruments near extreme levels • 10:00-11:00 AM - CCI can spike on gaps as the ASX reacts to overnight Wall Street and Asian leads; wait for stabilisation • 11:00 AM-3:00 PM - Best period for CCI momentum and zero-line signals • 3:00-4:00 PM (closing single-price auction ~4:10 PM) - CCI reversals common; manage intraday positions |
| Asx Specific | 20-period CCI works well on the ASX SPI 200; +100/-100 levels reliable for momentum • High-beta resource/mining names (BHP, RIO, FMG, lithium stocks) reach CCI extremes faster due to volatility; consider +150/-150 levels • CCI effective on liquid stocks with exchange-traded options (ETOs) - the big four banks (CBA, WBC, NAB, ANZ) and major miners; avoid illiquid counters • SPI 200: A$25 per index point per contract; XJO index options: A$10 per index point - factor multipliers into position calculations • CCI trades may require holding overnight; the SPI 200 trades a day and an evening session (near-24-hour) on ASX 24, so maintain adequate margin with your clearing participant |
| Commodity Markets | Australia has no MCX-style retail commodity futures exchange; retail commodity exposure is via ASIC-regulated CFDs (leverage capped - gold 20:1, other commodities 10:1) or international futures (CME/COMEX). ASX-listed commodity futures are agricultural (wheat, barley, canola) and electricity, which are less retail-oriented • Gold (XAU/USD) CCI trends smoothly; +100/-100 crossovers reliable; as a major gold producer, local sentiment tracks the gold price • Crude (WTI/Brent) CCI is excellent for trends; reaches +200/-200 during strong moves; accessed via CFD or international futures • Iron ore is Australia's key export; iron ore price moves drive ASX resource stocks (BHP, RIO, FMG) more than any single domestic commodity contract • ASX grain futures (wheat, barley, canola) have thinner liquidity; CCI works but slippage is a real consideration • CFD and international commodity markets trade nearly 24 hours; CCI trends develop across global sessions |
| Currency Futures | AUD/USD is a liquid major pair; CCI moves can be smoother than equities, so zero-line and +100/-100 signals are both usable • Retail FX exposure is via ASIC-regulated margin FX/CFDs (leverage capped at 30:1 for major FX pairs under ASIC's product intervention order) or CME AUD/USD futures • AUD/USD is a 'risk-on' commodity currency - inversely correlated to the US Dollar Index (DXY) and positively correlated to iron ore, gold and Chinese demand • RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) cash-rate decisions and interventions cause sudden CCI spikes; trade with caution around RBA meeting days |
| Tax Implications | Australia has no securities transaction tax (no STT equivalent); brokerage/commission and clearing fees apply per trade • Short-term derivative trading is generally assessed on revenue account as ordinary income (see ATO ruling TR 2005/15 for CFDs); longer-term investment positions may fall on capital account, where the 50% CGT discount can apply to assets held over 12 months by an individual • If you are carrying on a business of trading, profits are ordinary assessable income and losses are deductible; classification depends on frequency, intention and scale and is assessed by the ATO • Financial supplies are input-taxed, so retail traders do not charge GST on trading gains • Document CCI entry/exit levels and all trades; the ATO requires records be kept for five years • Pay PAYG instalments (typically quarterly) if the ATO enters you into the PAYG instalment system based on your investment or business income |
| Market Correlation | The ASX open and the SPI 200 evening session react to Wall Street (S&P 500) overnight; strong US moves often coincide with CCI gapping through +100/-100 at the open • Iron ore, coal and Chinese demand drive resource stocks and the index; commodity strength supports CCI holding above zero • Australia's large superannuation pool provides steady domestic buying that can cushion CCI from reaching extreme lows • CCI may whipsaw around ASX index futures/options expiry (the SPI 200 expires quarterly on the third Thursday of March, June, September and December) and around quarterly index rebalances |
Both are momentum oscillators, but they differ in range and calculation. RSI is bounded between 0-100, making interpretation straightforward with fixed overbought (70) and oversold (30) levels. CCI is unbounded and can exceed +200 or -200 in extreme moves. CCI uses Typical Price and Mean Deviation, while RSI uses gains vs losses. CCI is often preferred for momentum breakouts, while RSI is popular for overbought/oversold conditions.
The standard period is 20, which works well for most situations. For intraday trading (15-min charts), consider 14-20 periods. For swing trading (hourly/daily), 20-30 periods work well. Shorter periods give more signals but more noise; longer periods are smoother but slower. Match the period to your trading timeframe and desired signal frequency.
Common reasons: (1) Trading in ranging markets - add ADX > 25 filter, (2) Entering at extreme CCI levels (already +150) where reversal is likely, (3) Stop loss too tight - use 2x ATR or swing high/low, (4) Not waiting for confirmation - require volume and EMA alignment. CCI works best in trending markets with proper filters.
Yes, in strong trends, CCI can stay above +100 or below -100 for extended periods. This is why you shouldn't automatically fade extreme readings. Instead, trade WITH the momentum while CCI is extreme, and only look for reversals when you see divergence AND confirmation. Fading extremes without confirmation is a common and costly mistake.
The zero line represents equilibrium - price at its recent average. Uses include: (1) Early entry signals - crossing above zero after being oversold suggests recovery, (2) Trend confirmation - CCI consistently above zero indicates bullish bias, (3) Exit signal - crossing below zero against your position suggests momentum has ended. Zero line signals are earlier but riskier than +100/-100 signals.
The dual CCI system uses two CCIs with different periods (e.g., 8 and 20). The longer-period CCI acts as a filter confirming momentum direction. The shorter-period CCI provides entry timing. Enter only when both confirm: long-period CCI > +100 AND short-period CCI crosses above +100. This reduces whipsaws by requiring momentum confirmation on two timeframes.
In an uptrend (CCI making higher lows above zero): Wait for CCI to pull back toward zero (or slightly below). Enter when CCI turns up and crosses back above +50 or +100. Stop below recent swing low. Target: CCI returning to previous high. This provides better entry prices than chasing +100 breakouts while staying with the trend.
Hidden divergence is a continuation pattern, opposite to regular divergence which signals reversal. Hidden bullish: Price makes higher low, CCI makes lower low - suggests uptrend continues. Hidden bearish: Price makes lower high, CCI makes higher high - suggests downtrend continues. Use hidden divergence to add to existing positions in the trend direction.
Higher timeframe (daily) CCI establishes momentum context. Only take lower timeframe (hourly) signals that align with daily direction. Example: If daily CCI > +100, only take long signals on hourly. If daily CCI < -100, only take short signals on hourly. This filter significantly improves signal quality by ensuring you trade with the bigger picture momentum.
Volatile instruments reach CCI extremes more frequently, causing more whipsaws with standard settings. Options: (1) Use higher thresholds (+125/-125 instead of +100/-100), (2) Use longer CCI period (25 instead of 20), (3) Require stronger confirmation (ADX > 30), (4) Use volatility-adaptive period. Backtest different settings on the specific instrument.
Volatility-adaptive CCI adjusts its lookback period based on current volatility. Formula: Adaptive Period = Base Period × (Current ATR / Average ATR). When volatility is high, period lengthens to reduce noise. When volatility is low, period shortens for sensitivity. This adapts CCI to changing market conditions automatically. Bound the period between reasonable limits (10-40).
Algorithmic divergence detection requires: (1) Identify swing points in price using local min/max, (2) Identify corresponding CCI values at those points, (3) Compare slopes: If price lows are decreasing (negative slope) but CCI lows are increasing (positive slope), bullish divergence exists. Implementation requires robust swing point detection to avoid false readings in noisy data.
Portfolio CCI Score = Sum of (CCI × Position Weight) across all positions. It measures net momentum exposure. Positive score = net bullish, negative = net bearish. Uses: (1) Monitor if portfolio is overly directional, (2) Reduce new entries if score is extreme (all positions same direction), (3) Identify hedging needs, (4) Rebalance when score exceeds thresholds. Helps prevent concentrated momentum bets.
Yes. Train a classifier on CCI signal features: CCI value, CCI slope, time since last crossover, ADX level, volume ratio, time of day. Target: successful (1) or failed (0) signal. Use probability output to filter entries (only trade if P > 0.6) or size positions (higher probability = larger size). Requires programming and continuous model retraining with new market data.
Research directions: (1) Volume-weighted CCI: Use volume-weighted typical price (VWTP), (2) Smoothed CCI: Apply EMA to final CCI for less noise, (3) Median-based CCI: Use median instead of mean for outlier robustness, (4) CCI derivatives: CCI ROC (rate of change of CCI), CCI Histogram (CCI - Signal Line). Each modification addresses different weaknesses. Backtest thoroughly before implementing.
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