Signals
Structured Signals, Not Random Entries
Most signal providers give you a direction and pray. FXH signals include a complete execution plan: entry price, stop-loss, take-profit, timing context, and risk parameters. You receive a decision framework, not a guess.
What Our Signals Include
Every signal delivered by FXH contains the following components. We do not send alerts without context. We do not send "buy" or "sell" without explaining why, where to exit if wrong, and where to take profit if right.
- Entry Price: The specific level or zone where the setup triggers. Not a vague "around here" — a precise plan.
- Stop-Loss (SL): The price level at which the thesis is invalidated. This is not optional. Every signal includes a maximum loss boundary.
- Take-Profit (TP): One or more logical targets based on technical structure. We identify where the move is expected to encounter resistance or support.
- Timing Context: Session relevance (London, New York, Asia), upcoming economic events that could invalidate the setup, and estimated duration.
- Risk Planning: Suggested position sizing relative to account balance, risk-reward ratio, and maximum recommended exposure.
Signal Delivery
Signals are delivered via email and through our member dashboard. Pro Signals subscribers receive real-time alerts during active sessions. Starter subscribers receive a daily compilation delivered before the London open.
No guaranteed profit. Signals are educational tools that present technical analysis in actionable format. Markets are inherently uncertain. Even high-probability setups fail. Risk management — which we include in every signal — is what keeps you in the game when setups do not work out.
Pairs We Cover
Our primary focus is on the most liquid and widely traded instruments:
- XAU/USD (Gold vs US Dollar) — Our highest-conviction pair. Deep liquidity, clear technical structure, and strong institutional participation.
- EUR/USD (Euro vs US Dollar) — The most traded forex pair. Tight spreads and predictable session behavior.
Structured vs Random
The difference between a structured signal and a random entry is the difference between a business plan and a lottery ticket. Random entries rely on hope. Structured signals rely on:
- Defined technical criteria for entry
- Predefined exit rules for both profit and loss
- Position sizing that protects capital
- Context about market conditions and session dynamics
- A feedback loop — we journal every signal outcome to refine future analysis