Comprehensive trend identification using multiple Ichimoku components
| Strategy Type | Ichimoku Cloud Trading System |
| Market Outlook | Comprehensive trend identification using multiple Ichimoku components |
| Risk Profile | Moderate - multi-layered confirmation reduces false signals |
| Reward Profile | Excellent returns from riding confirmed trends with cloud support |
| Time Horizon | Swing to positional (days to weeks) |
| Capital Requirement | Moderate (£3,000 - £10,000); the full FTSE 100 future needs roughly £5,000+ initial margin per contract, so smaller accounts trade the Mini FTSE 100 future (£1 per point) or use spread bets/CFDs |
| Margin Type | Overnight/initial SPAN margin for swing and positional futures; intraday (day) margin for same-session cloud signals. CFD and spread-bet margin is set by FCA retail leverage limits (5% / 20:1 on major indices) |
| Best Used When | Price clearly above or below cloud with Tenkan/Kijun alignment |
| Lse Applicability | FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 index futures on ICE Futures Europe are the liquid UK index futures. There is no liquid UK banking-sector or financial-sector index future equivalent to India's BANKNIFTY/FINNIFTY - UK sector exposure is taken through individual shares or sector ETFs, not a sector index future. Single stock futures on major UK blue chips are listed on Eurex, with liquidity concentrated in a handful of names and a predominantly institutional user base. Most UK retail traders access these same underlyings through spread bets or CFDs rather than exchange-traded futures. |
| Fca Compliance | Fully compliant - standard cash-settled exchange-traded index futures. CFDs and spread bets on the same underlyings are FCA-regulated leveraged products subject to retail leverage limits, the 50% margin close-out rule, and negative balance protection. |
| Contract Specs | £10 per index point per contract; tick 0.5 points (£5). Cash settled on ICE Futures Europe • £1 per index point per contract; tick 0.5 points (£0.50) - retail-accessible sizing • £2 per index point per contract; materially thinner liquidity than the FTSE 100 • Contract size varies by stock (typically 100 shares); variable, mostly institutional liquidity |
| Trading Hours | 08:00 - 16:30 London time (LSE cash session); ICE FTSE index futures trade an extended electronic session around the cash hours |
| Ichimoku Settings | 9, 26, 52 (Tenkan, Kijun, Senkou Span B) • 7, 22, 44 for faster signals • Standard settings designed for Japanese 6-day trading week |
| Expiry Considerations | Ichimoku works best on daily and higher timeframes; quarterly futures expiry (third Friday of March, June, September and December) and the associated rollover can add noise on lower timeframes |
| Tax Implications | Futures and CFD gains are subject to Capital Gains Tax (18% basic / 24% higher rate, £3,000 annual exempt amount for 2025/26); spread bet profits are CGT and stamp-duty exempt (gambling treatment, so no loss relief); income-tax treatment applies only in rare professional-trader cases - the inverse of India's business-income treatment |
Start with just two elements: 1) Price vs Cloud: is price above (bullish) or below (bearish) the cloud? 2) Cloud color: is it green (bullish) or red (bearish)? If both are bullish, look for long trades. If both are bearish, look for shorts. Add complexity gradually: next learn TK relationship, then Chikou. Master each element before adding the next. Within a few weeks of focused study, the chart will make intuitive sense.
Ichimoku works best on daily and weekly timeframes - this is what it was designed for. The standard settings (9, 26, 52) represent roughly 1.5 weeks, 1 month, and 2 months. For beginners: start with daily charts only. As you gain experience, use weekly for major trend and daily for entries. Intraday Ichimoku works but requires more skill and produces more noise. Start with daily, it's most reliable.
Generally, avoid new entries when price is inside the cloud. The cloud represents a zone of indecision/equilibrium. Signals inside the cloud (like TK cross) are weak because trend direction is unclear. Wait for: price to exit the cloud clearly, then look for entry signals. Exception: if you're already in a profitable trade, you might hold through cloud passage with tighter stops. But don't initiate new positions inside the cloud.
The most reliable single signal is a TK cross ABOVE the cloud (for longs) or BELOW the cloud (for shorts). This combines: 1) Trend direction (price vs cloud), 2) Momentum change (TK cross), 3) Confirmation (cross in trend direction). However, Ichimoku's power comes from multiple element alignment. The 'best' signal is when all 5 elements align: price above cloud, Tenkan above Kijun, Chikou above past price, future cloud green, Kijun rising. This full alignment is the strongest signal.
Ichimoku provides natural stop levels: 1) Kijun-sen: most common stop. In uptrend, stop below Kijun. Provides dynamic support. 2) Cloud edge: stop below cloud top (for longs above cloud). More conservative. 3) Tenkan-sen: tighter stop for aggressive trades. Exit if close below Tenkan. 4) Opposite cloud edge: widest stop, for position trades. Recommendation: start with Kijun stops. If Kijun is far (> 2% away), use cloud edge or tighter percentage stop. Always calculate position size based on stop distance and risk tolerance.
Kumo twist trading: 1) Identify twist: Senkou A and B crossing in future cloud. 2) Twist is visible 26 periods before it reaches current price. 3) Green-to-red twist: bearish warning. If long, prepare to exit or hedge. Don't initiate new longs. 4) Red-to-green twist: bullish warning. If short, prepare to cover. Look for long entries. 5) Trade timing: don't trade immediately on seeing future twist. Wait for price to approach twist area. 6) Twist area often becomes key S/R - watch for reactions there. Key insight: twist warns of change but isn't immediate signal. Use for preparation and risk management.
Chikou best practices: 1) Confirmation: Chikou above past price confirms bullish momentum. Below confirms bearish. 2) Obstacle check: before entry, look at where Chikou will be in relation to past price/cloud. If Chikou faces congestion or cloud, move may stall. 3) Clear space: best signals when Chikou is in 'open space' (no past price obstacles). 4) Exit warning: if Chikou enters past cloud or congestion, tighten stops. 5) Don't overcomplicate: if other elements strong, don't veto trade just for Chikou. Use as confirmation/warning, not primary signal. Most traders underutilize Chikou - it provides unique backward-looking perspective.
High-quality signal checklist: 1) Price clearly above/below cloud (not inside). 2) Cloud is reasonably thick (strong S/R). 3) TK cross in direction of cloud (not against). 4) Chikou clear of obstacles. 5) Future cloud supports direction (same color). 6) Kijun sloping in trade direction. 7) Higher timeframe aligned. 8) Volume supporting move. Count these factors: 7-8 factors = exceptional signal (full size). 5-6 factors = good signal (standard size). 3-4 factors = moderate (reduced size). < 3 factors = skip or minimal size. Quality scoring removes emotion.
Conflicting signals happen. Resolution: 1) Higher timeframe wins: if weekly bullish but daily bearish, weekly bias prevails. 2) Price vs cloud is primary: price position relative to cloud trumps TK relationship. 3) Wait for resolution: if elements conflict, often best to wait. Cloud break or TK cross may resolve confusion. 4) Reduce size: if you must trade with conflicts, reduce position size. 5) Note the conflicts: some conflict is okay if majority of elements align. 3 bullish + 2 bearish = still lean bullish but with caution. General rule: 'When in doubt, stay out.' Ichimoku provides plenty of clean signals - wait for them.
Ichimoku can work intraday with adjustments: 1) Standard settings (9, 26, 52) on 15-min or hourly charts work. Signals are faster but noisier. 2) Use daily Ichimoku for bias, intraday for entry. If daily above cloud, only take intraday long signals. 3) Expectations: more signals, more false signals, smaller moves. 4) Challenges: cloud may be thin, frequent TK crosses, Chikou harder to read. 5) Alternative: use simplified Ichimoku intraday - focus only on price vs cloud and TK relationship. Ignore Chikou complexities. For beginners: master daily Ichimoku first. Intraday requires more skill and faster decision-making.
Ichimoku time theory implementation: 1) Identify significant high or low. 2) Count forward using Ichimoku numbers: 9, 17, 26, 33, 42, 65, 76 periods. 3) Mark these dates as potential turn points. 4) Combine with price levels: if day 26 coincides with Kijun or cloud, high probability zone. 5) Wave structure (N, V, Y): identify wave pattern unfolding. N-wave has 3 legs. Project target using wave calculations. 6) Price targets: I (equal to first wave), V (symmetric), N (extension), E (expansion). 7) Application: use time counts for when, price calculations for where. Convergence = highest probability. Advanced: requires practice and historical study. Not every turn hits Ichimoku numbers, but many do.
Optimization approach: 1) Start with standard (9, 26, 52) - works due to widespread use. 2) If adjusting, maintain ratios: 1:3:6 approximately (9:26:52, 7:22:44). 3) Backtest alternatives on 3+ years data. Compare: signal count, win rate, profit factor, max drawdown. 4) Walk-forward validation: optimize on training period, test on out-of-sample. 5) Robustness check: good parameters work across range (if 9 works, 8 and 10 should also be decent). 6) Cross-instrument validation: settings should work on similar instruments. 7) Avoid precision optimization (e.g., 8,24,51 instead of 9,26,52). Use round numbers that preserve ratios. 8) Standard usually sufficient unless trading style demands change.
Professional Ichimoku usage: 1) Quantitative integration: Ichimoku as one factor in multi-factor model, not standalone. 2) Custom scoring: weighted scoring of elements based on backtested importance. 3) Regime detection: Ichimoku state helps classify market regime. 4) Cross-asset: apply same Ichimoku framework across asset classes. 5) Time theory: active use of Ichimoku time counts for option expiry, rebalancing timing. 6) Automated alerts: systematic monitoring of TK crosses, cloud breaks across universe. 7) Risk management: portfolio-wide Ichimoku status for aggregate exposure decisions. 8) Execution: sophisticated entry around Ichimoku levels to optimize fills. Retail adaptation: use systematic scoring, maintain multiple timeframe discipline, track Ichimoku across portfolio.
Ichimoku limitations: 1) Lagging indicator: uses historical high/low midpoints. Signals come after move has started. 2) Optimized for trending: struggles in ranging markets (flat Kijun, tangled elements). 3) Fixed parameters: 9, 26, 52 may not suit all markets/timeframes. 4) Complexity: easy to see patterns that don't exist. 5) Self-fulfilling limited: less widely used than MA/MACD, less self-fulfilling effect. 6) No statistical validation: unlike some indicators, Ichimoku wave theory has limited academic testing. 7) Subjective interpretation: element alignment can be interpreted differently. Mitigation: use with other indicators (ADX for trending confirmation), accept lag as filtering feature, quantify signals systematically, track actual performance vs expectations.
Automated screening components: 1) Data: daily OHLC for all instruments. 2) Calculations: compute all 5 Ichimoku lines programmatically. 3) Element status: for each instrument, determine: price vs cloud (above/below/inside), TK relationship (Tenkan above/below Kijun), Chikou vs past price, future cloud color, Kijun slope. 4) Scoring: assign +1/-1 for each bullish/bearish element. Sum = total score. 5) Alerts: trigger when score changes significantly, TK cross occurs, cloud breakout. 6) Ranking: sort universe by Ichimoku score. 7) Output: daily report of top bullish, top bearish, recent signals. Implementation: Python with pandas for calculations. Store historical Ichimoku states. Alert via email/Telegram. Dashboard for visual monitoring.
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