| Strategy Overview | Ichimoku Cloud (Ichimoku Kinko Hyo) is a comprehensive Japanese technical analysis system that provides a complete picture of price action at a glance. Developed by Goichi Hosoda in the 1930s after 30 years of research, the system identifies trend direction, momentum, and support/resistance levels through five interrelated components. This algorithm automates Ichimoku analysis for Singapore's SGX futures markets, generating signals based on cloud position, crossovers, and multi-component confluence for high-probability trading setups. |
| Best Conditions | Most effective in trending markets with clear directional bias; works across all timeframes but Daily/4H provide strongest signals |
| Avoid When | Avoid trading inside the cloud (Kumo), during flat/thin cloud periods, and when multiple components give conflicting signals |
| Market Applicability | Highly effective on SiMSCI and FTSE China A50 futures; the system's trend-following nature aligns well with institutional-driven index movements (and, for the A50, China-driven trends) • Works well on liquid SGX single stock futures with strong trending characteristics (DBS, OCBC, UOB, Singtel, Keppel); particularly effective on momentum names • Very effective on SGX iron ore and rubber futures, where global and China-driven trends create extended directional moves • Applicable to SGX FX futures such as USD/CNH and USD/SGD; the 26-period displacement aligns well with monthly cycles |
| Trading Sessions | 08:30-10:00 SGT (T-session open) - check overnight cloud position; morning gaps through the cloud (driven by US/China leads) are significant signals • 10:30 AM-3:00 PM - monitor for TK crosses and cloud interactions during consolidation • 3:30-5:15 PM (T-session close) - assess the daily close relative to the cloud for next-day bias; the T+1 night session (18:15-02:00 SGT, A50 later) extends price discovery |
| Institutional Context | Net institutional/foreign buying or selling trends (SGX weekly fund-flow data) often align with Ichimoku trend signals; sustained institutional activity confirms cloud breakouts • SGX index futures show strong trend persistence that Ichimoku captures effectively • Rising open interest and turnover during cloud breakouts indicate genuine trend initiation • Heavy call writing above cloud resistance or put writing below cloud support (on A50/Nikkei options) confirms Ichimoku levels |
| Taxes And Charges | There is no securities transaction tax (no STT) on SGX futures; only exchange/clearing fees apply, and Ichimoku's longer holding periods keep transaction frequency low • GST (9%) applies to brokerage and exchange fees, but dealings in financial instruments are GST-exempt for individuals; fewer trades than scalping strategies keep costs minimal • There is no stamp duty on futures (stamp duty applies to share transfers, not derivatives) • For individuals, Ichimoku's trend-following positional trades produce gains that are generally capital in nature and not taxable; frequent, systematic trading may be assessed by IRAS as a taxable trade under the 'badges of trade' |
| Margin Requirements | Approximately S$1,500-2,500 per contract (SGX-DC initial margin); plan for multi-day holds • Approximately US$1,000-1,500 per contract (USD-denominated) • SGX single stock futures margin varies by name and volatility; size by notional (100 shares per contract) • Full SGX-DC margin required, marked to market daily; Ichimoku trades often span multiple sessions and the T+1 night session |
| Local Factors | The Singapore Budget (February) can cause cloud breakouts; wait for post-event confirmation • MAS quarterly monetary policy (Jan/Apr/Jul/Oct), an S$NEER exchange-rate decision, impacts cloud position on index futures; significant decisions can cause cloud color changes • Earnings can trigger cloud breakouts on individual single stock futures; trade post-result confirmation • US and China market trends influence the SiMSCI and A50 cloud structure; overnight gaps require reassessment |
The default parameters work remarkably well across most markets including SGX futures. The original settings were designed for 6-day trading weeks but have proven effective on modern 5-day weeks as well. Some traders experiment with 7-22-44 (faster) or 10-30-60 (slower), but the standard settings are recommended for beginners. After gaining experience, you can test variations on specific instruments to see if adjustments improve results. Most professional traders stick with defaults for consistency.
The best timeframe depends on your trading style. Daily charts provide the most reliable signals for swing/position trading - this is the classic Ichimoku application. 4-Hour charts work well for active swing trading with 2-5 day holding periods. 1-Hour can be used for shorter-term trades but produces more noise. Weekly charts are excellent for longer-term trend analysis. Many traders use multiple timeframes: Daily for bias, 4-Hour for entry timing. Avoid 5-15 minute timeframes for standard Ichimoku trading as they generate too many false signals.
Conflicting signals indicate unclear market conditions - the best action is usually to wait. When some components are bullish and others bearish, you lack the alignment that creates high-probability trades. Specifically: If price is above cloud but Tenkan is below Kijun, wait for TK alignment. If TK cross is bullish but Chikou is below price, wait for Chikou confirmation. If components conflict, either pass on the trade or enter with reduced position size and tighter stops. Don't force trades when the picture is unclear.
Ichimoku is a trend-following system, so trades should be held until the trend ends - not for arbitrary time periods. Exit signals include: opposite TK cross, price entering cloud from profitable side, Chikou crossing below/above price, or cloud color change. On Daily charts, trades often last 2-6 weeks. On 4-Hour, expect 3-10 days. The system is designed to capture trends, so exiting prematurely defeats its purpose. Use trailing stops (Kijun or cloud) to lock in profits while letting winners run.
Standard Ichimoku doesn't provide exact price targets like Fibonacci extensions. However, you can use: Previous swing highs/lows as targets, opposing cloud edges as potential reversal zones, and measured moves from trading ranges. Advanced Ichimoku includes Hosoda's wave calculations (N-wave, E-wave targets), but these require additional study. For practical trading, use 2:1 or 3:1 risk-reward targets based on your stop distance, or simply trail using Kijun until exit signal triggers.
Ichimoku is designed to be self-contained, so additional indicators should complement, not duplicate its information. Useful additions: Volume for confirming breakouts (cloud breakout on high volume is more reliable). RSI for identifying overextended conditions when price is far from cloud. ATR for sizing positions and setting stop distances. Avoid adding moving averages (Ichimoku already has them embedded) or multiple trend indicators. Price action patterns at Ichimoku levels (engulfing at Kijun, hammer at cloud) are valuable additions. Keep it simple - Ichimoku provides most of what you need.
Confirmation criteria for cloud breakouts: (1) Price closes beyond cloud for 2 consecutive candles - single close often retraces. (2) Chikou Span also clears the cloud from 26 periods back. (3) Breakout occurs on above-average volume. (4) Future cloud color supports breakout direction (breaking above into green cloud stronger than into red). False breakout signs: single candle breakout that immediately reverses, breakout through thin cloud on low volume, Chikou still tangled with past price or cloud. Wait for multiple confirmation factors before committing full position.
Both are valid, suited for different situations. Kijun trailing: Tighter stop, protects more profits, but may exit on minor retracements. Best for: strong trends where you want to lock gains, volatile markets, shorter-term trades. Cloud edge trailing: Wider stop, gives more room, captures longer trends. Best for: established trends you want to ride, calmer markets, position trades. A middle approach: Start with Kijun stop and switch to cloud edge if trade moves significantly in your favor. You can also use both - exit half on Kijun violation, hold remainder until cloud exit.
Flat, thin clouds indicate ranging/consolidating markets where standard Ichimoku signals are unreliable. Strategies during consolidation: (1) Wait for breakout - avoid trading until cloud thickens or price breaks clearly. (2) Range trade carefully - use Senkou Span B as range boundaries, not TK crosses. (3) Reduce position size - if you must trade, use smaller positions. (4) Prepare for breakout - analyze which direction the breakout is more likely based on higher timeframe and have orders ready. (5) Watch for cloud expansion - when cloud starts thickening, trend is developing. Patience during consolidation prevents losses from false signals.
Ichimoku can technically be applied to any timeframe, but very short timeframes (5-15 minute) produce significantly more noise and false signals. Issues: TK crosses occur frequently without follow-through, cloud breakouts fail often, Chikou provides little confirmation value. If you want to use Ichimoku for intraday: (1) Use 1-Hour as minimum timeframe for signal generation. (2) Use 15-minute only for entry refinement, not signals. (3) Require higher timeframe (4H) confirmation for any intraday trade. (4) Accept lower win rate compared to daily timeframe. Many traders find 4-Hour is the fastest practical timeframe for reliable Ichimoku signals.
Hosoda's wave theory identifies patterns (I, V, N, P, Y waves) with specific target calculations: N-wave (most common): After impulse (I-wave) and correction (V-wave), the N-wave target = End of I-wave + Length of I-wave. E-wave (extended): Target = Start of I-wave + (Length of I-wave × 2). NT-wave (truncated): For weaker moves. Calculation example: I-wave from 18,000 to 19,000 (1,000 points), correction to 18,500, N-wave target = 19,000 + 1,000 = 20,000. These calculations provide objective targets but require correct wave identification. Practice identifying wave structures before relying on targets for live trading.
Ichimoku effectively identifies sector strength and rotation: (1) Apply Ichimoku to sector indices/baskets (Banks, REITs, Industrials, etc.). (2) Rank sectors by Ichimoku health: Price above cloud + green cloud + TK bullish = strongest. Price in cloud = neutral. Price below cloud + red cloud = weakest. (3) Rotate capital to sectors with strongest Ichimoku picture. (4) Within strong sectors, select stocks with individual Ichimoku alignment. (5) Exit sectors when Ichimoku turns negative (TK bear cross, cloud twist to red). This systematic rotation captures trending sectors while avoiding laggards. Weekly Ichimoku on sectors with daily on individual stocks creates effective allocation framework.
Ichimoku conditions correlate with IV behavior: (1) Consolidation (flat thin cloud, TK convergence) = typically low IV as market expects nothing - good time to buy options. (2) Cloud breakout occurring = IV expansion as directional move begins - capture with existing positions or buy early. (3) Strong trend (price far from cloud) = elevated IV but may decline if trend continues smoothly - be cautious buying expensive options. (4) Kumo Twist ahead = uncertainty = potentially elevated IV around twist date. Strategy: During Ichimoku consolidation, buy options (straddles/strangles) or calendars positioned for breakout. After established trend, sell premium (covered calls) or use spreads. Match IV exposure to Ichimoku regime.
Avoid overfitting with these principles: (1) Keep rules simple - basic TK cross + cloud position works; complex multi-condition rules often overfit. (2) Use walk-forward analysis - optimize on 2 years, test on next year, repeat. Never optimize on full dataset. (3) Test across multiple instruments - rules should work on SiMSCI, the A50, and single stock futures, not just one. (4) Limit parameter variations - test standard (9-26-52), one faster (7-22-44), one slower (10-30-60); don't fine-tune to specific values. (5) Accept reasonable performance - 50-60% win rate with 2:1 reward-risk is excellent; don't chase 90% win rates. (6) Focus on robustness over optimization - consistent moderate returns beat sporadic high returns.
For 24/7 markets, standard parameters need consideration: Original 9-26-52 assumed 6-day weeks (9 = 1.5 weeks, 26 = 1 month, 52 = 2 months). For crypto (no weekends): Some use 10-30-60 to approximate monthly cycles. Others keep standard settings as they've proven robust. Key considerations: (1) Use same parameters consistently - don't switch based on recent performance. (2) Focus on Daily timeframe or higher - 4H/1H become noisy in 24/7 markets. (3) Backtest both standard and adjusted parameters on your specific instrument. (4) Time-based analysis (Hosoda numbers) may need adjustment for continuous markets. For most SGX traders dealing with standard equity/futures markets, original parameters remain optimal.
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