ADX Multi-Asset Trend

Futures Intermediate United Kingdom FTSE 100 Index Futures FTSE 250 Index Futures UK Single Stocks (CFD/Spread Bet) London Commodities (ICE/LME) GBP/USD & FX (Spot/CFD/Spread Bet)
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Payoff Profile

ADX indicator displayed below price chart showing trend strength measurement independent of direction

United Kingdom Market Details

Market Hours Strategy Calculate ADX on prior session close; review overnight FTSE futures, the US close and the Asian session to identify trending instruments before the 8:00 AM cash open • 8:00-10:00 AM London - the opening auction prints at 8:00; avoid the first 15 minutes and wait for ADX confirmation as the auction imbalance clears • 10:00 AM-2:30 PM - optimal window for ADX-based trend entries while London trades alone, before the US open adds noise • 2:30-4:30 PM - the US cash open at 2:30 PM London injects volatility (watch for ADX whipsaws on US data); closing auction at 4:30; book intraday positions and reassess daily ADX
Lse Specific FTSE 100 futures (ICE Futures Europe, £10/point) give clean ADX signals due to deep liquidity; ADX > 25 is reliable. The index is ~80% overseas earners, so it tracks global risk and GBP weakness as much as UK-domestic news • FTSE 250 is more domestically exposed and more volatile than the FTSE 100; ADX tends to spike faster - use an ADX > 30 threshold. FTSE 250 futures exist on ICE but are far less liquid, so mind slippage • Exchange-traded single-stock futures are largely illiquid in the UK; retail leveraged single-stock exposure runs through CFDs or spread bets. Stick to high-turnover FTSE 100/250 constituents - mid/small caps produce erratic ADX • FTSE 100 future: £10 per index point (notional = index level × £10, i.e. tens of thousands of pounds per contract). Spread bets are sized in £/point (e.g. £1/point) for flexible, retail-scale exposure • ICE futures use SPAN-style initial margin. For retail CFDs/spread bets, FCA leverage caps apply: major indices 20:1 (5% margin), individual shares 5:1 (20%), major FX 30:1, other commodities 10:1 • Unlike India's BANKNIFTY, the UK has NO liquid single-sector banking future. For banks-sector trend exposure use a financials/banks ETF or a basket of LSE bank shares (HSBA, BARC, LLOY, NWG, STAN) via CFD/spread bet
London Commodities ICE Brent Crude is the London benchmark and trends strongly - ADX is highly effective; full contract is 1,000 barrels/lot. Retail typically trades Brent (and WTI) via CFD/spread bet • London gold is OTC spot (LBMA) plus ETFs - there is NO liquid London-listed retail gold future. Trade gold trends via spot CFD/spread bet or US COMEX futures through a global-futures broker; gold shows prolonged trends so ADX > 30 flags multi-day moves • ICE UK NBP and Dutch TTF gas futures are volatile with quick ADX spikes - use a shorter period (10). Retail access is usually via CFD/spread bet (often on UK NatGas or US Henry Hub) • ICE energy/commodity contracts trade extended hours (Brent ~01:00-23:00 London). London commodity futures (ICE, LME) are largely institutional; retail uses CFDs/spread bets or US futures via brokers
Currency Futures GBP/USD ('Cable') is the primary domestic pair; ADX is effective for catching BoE- and data-driven trends. UK retail FX is overwhelmingly OTC (spot/CFD/spread bet), not exchange-traded futures; CME GBP futures exist but are US-listed • Monitor the Dollar Index (DXY) for GBP/USD ADX confirmation, plus EUR/GBP for the euro cross • Unlike RBI-managed USDINR, GBP free-floats and the Bank of England rarely intervenes in FX. ADX behaviour on Cable is driven by BoE MPC decisions, UK CPI/jobs data and the US Fed rather than central-bank intervention
Tax Implications No stamp duty on derivatives. The 0.5% SDRT/Stamp Duty applies only to UK cash-share purchases - not to futures, CFDs or spread bets • For most individuals, derivatives gains fall under Capital Gains Tax (CGT), not income tax. HMRC treats individual derivatives trading as investment unless the 'badges of trade' establish it as a trade (rare). There is no automatic 'business income' treatment as under India's Section 43(5) • CGT on gains: 18% within the basic-rate band, 24% above it (2025/26). Annual Exempt Amount: £3,000 • Spread bets are exempt from CGT and stamp duty (treated as gambling) - the most tax-efficient retail vehicle for many UK traders. Trade-off: spread-bet losses are NOT tax-deductible • CFDs are subject to CGT (no stamp duty, since you never own the underlying). CFD losses ARE deductible against gains • Report via Self Assessment if total gains exceed the Annual Exempt Amount or disposal proceeds exceed £50,000. Keep records of every trade
Institutional Flows FTSE 100 is driven by global risk appetite and the pound; a falling GBP often lifts the index (overseas earnings) even as ADX rises - watch the GBP/index relationship • FTSE 250 reflects UK-domestic sentiment; divergence between FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 ADX signals a global-vs-domestic split worth trading • The UK does not publish daily foreign/domestic institutional flow data like NSE's FII/DII. Infer positioning from fund-flow reports, ETF creations/redemptions and CFTC COT data for GBP and Brent • ADX can spike around quarterly 'triple witching' (third Friday of Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec) and FTSE index reviews as futures/options roll and the EDSP settlement auction prints

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between ADX and RSI?

ADX and RSI measure completely different things. ADX measures trend STRENGTH - how powerful a trend is, regardless of direction. RSI measures momentum and overbought/oversold conditions - whether price has moved too far too fast. ADX tells you IF you should use trend strategies (high ADX) or range strategies (low ADX). RSI tells you whether price might be due for a pullback. They serve different purposes and are best used together: use RSI for entries when ADX is low (ranging market), and use trend-following when ADX is high.

Can ADX go above 100?

No, ADX is mathematically bounded between 0 and 100. However, in practice, ADX rarely exceeds 60-70 even in the strongest trends. Readings above 50 are quite rare and indicate exceptional trend strength. The most common operating range is 15-45 for liquid instruments like FTSE 100 futures.

Why do I keep getting whipsawed when using DI crossovers?

You're probably trading DI crossovers without filtering by ADX level. When ADX is below 20-25, the market isn't trending, and DI crossovers are just random fluctuations that reverse quickly. Solution: Only act on DI crossovers when ADX is above 25 AND rising. This single filter will eliminate most whipsaw losses.

What period should I use for ADX?

The default 14-period works well for most situations on daily charts. For intraday trading on 15-minute or hourly charts, try 10-period for faster signals. For weekly charts or position trading, 14-18 periods work well. The principle is: shorter timeframe = shorter ADX period, longer timeframe = same or slightly longer ADX period.

Is ADX a leading or lagging indicator?

ADX is a lagging indicator - it CONFIRMS trends after they've started, rather than predicting them before they begin. This is actually a feature, not a bug. ADX's job is to tell you when a real trend exists, preventing you from trading false breakouts. The lag means you miss the very first part of moves, but you avoid many false signals.

How do I use ADX with multiple timeframes?

Start with the higher timeframe ADX to establish the trend context. If daily ADX is above 30 with +DI dominant, the market has a confirmed uptrend. Then use the lower timeframe (hourly) ADX for entry timing. Look for hourly DI crossovers in the direction of the daily trend when hourly ADX is above 20. This gives you higher timeframe trend confirmation with lower timeframe entry precision.

What does it mean when ADX is high but DI lines are close together?

This is a warning sign. High ADX with converging DI lines suggests the trend is losing conviction even though it was recently strong. The market may be preparing for a reversal or consolidation. Tighten stops on existing positions and avoid new entries. Wait for DI lines to separate again before trading.

How should I adjust stops based on ADX readings?

Use tighter stops when ADX is high (above 35) because the trend should move smoothly with less pullback. A 1.5x ATR stop often works well. When ADX is moderate (25-35), use wider stops (2x ATR) to accommodate normal pullbacks. When ADX is just above 20, use even wider stops (2.5x ATR) as the trend is less established. This scaling acknowledges different market behaviors at different trend strengths.

Can I use ADX for options trading?

Absolutely. When ADX is above 30, consider buying options (calls in uptrend, puts in downtrend) as trends tend to persist. When ADX is below 20, the market is ranging - ideal for selling options (short straddles, iron condors) as prices oscillate rather than trend. ADX helps you choose between directional (high ADX) and non-directional (low ADX) options strategies.

What is ADX-price divergence and how do I trade it?

ADX-price divergence occurs when price makes new highs/lows but ADX fails to make new highs. For example, FTSE 100 makes a new high but ADX shows a lower peak than its previous peak. This indicates the trend is losing strength despite price continuation. Use this for: (1) tightening stops on existing positions, (2) taking partial profits, or (3) preparing for potential reversal trades with tight stops.

How do institutional traders use ADX differently from retail traders?

Institutional traders use ADX for portfolio-level decisions, not just individual trades. They allocate more capital to high-ADX instruments and reduce exposure to low-ADX instruments. They also use ADX for regime identification - running different systematic strategies in trending vs ranging regimes. Additionally, institutions often combine ADX with order flow data, using ADX to confirm that institutional money flow is creating a sustainable trend.

How do I backtest and optimize ADX parameters properly?

Proper ADX backtesting requires: (1) Testing across multiple instruments to ensure robustness, (2) Testing across different market periods (trending years, ranging years), (3) Using walk-forward analysis (optimize on 3 years, test on 1 year, roll forward) to prevent overfitting, (4) Testing threshold variations (20, 22, 25, 28, 30) and period variations (10, 12, 14, 18). The goal is finding parameters that work reasonably well across all conditions, not perfectly in any single condition.

What is the complete Wilder system and should I use it?

The complete Wilder system combines ATR (volatility measurement), Directional Movement (ADX, +DI, -DI for trend identification), and Parabolic SAR (trailing stop management). Using all three together provides a complete trading framework: ATR for position sizing and stop width, ADX/DI for entry signals, and SAR for exit management. This integrated approach outperforms using ADX alone because each component handles a specific aspect of trade management.

How do I handle ADX in highly correlated instruments?

When multiple correlated instruments (like FTSE 100 and FTSE 250, or banking stocks) all show high ADX in the same direction, your portfolio has concentrated exposure. Solutions: (1) Reduce total position size across correlated instruments, (2) Choose only the highest-ADX instrument among correlated options, (3) Add uncorrelated positions (London commodities, currency futures) to diversify, (4) Use portfolio-level ADX monitoring to track total trend exposure.

Can ADX predict market regime changes before they happen?

ADX cannot predict regime changes in advance - it's a lagging indicator that confirms regimes. However, certain patterns provide early warnings: (1) Prolonged ADX compression below 15 often precedes breakouts, (2) ADX-price divergence warns of trend exhaustion, (3) ADX peaking above 50 and turning down signals regime transition from trending to consolidation. Experts combine these ADX patterns with other leading indicators (volume, market breadth, sentiment) for better regime change detection.

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