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AUD/BRL

aud-brl flag

Dollar Australien / Real Bresilien

3.58552
BRL
Sponsorisé
+0.02807
+0.79%
27 avr., 18:15 UTC
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AUD/BRL Technical Analysis – Signals, Pivots & Indicators

Technical Outlook
Oscillators
IndicatorValueSignal
No data available
Moving Averages
NameValueSignal
No data available
Pivot Points
No data available

Technical analysis data is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading forex involves significant risk.

FAQ

Each signal reflects the consensus reading of a set of technical indicators — moving averages and oscillators — calculated from historical price data for this currency pair.Strong Buy — the large majority of indicators point upward, suggesting bullish momentum.Buy — more indicators are pointing upward than downward.Neutral — indicators are mixed, with no clear directional consensus.Sell — more indicators are pointing downward than upward.Strong Sell — the large majority of indicators point downward, suggesting bearish momentum.These signals are generated algorithmically and are not investment advice.
Signals update each time you change the timeframe selector. The page does not auto-refresh mid-session — select a new timeframe to recalculate. The "Last updated" timestamp shows when the underlying data was last computed for the current timeframe.
A pivot point is a price level calculated from the previous session's high, low, and close. Traders use pivot levels as reference points to identify potential support and resistance zones for the current session.The central Pivot (P) level is the baseline. R1, R2, R3 are resistance levels above it — areas where price may stall or reverse upward moves. S1, S2, S3 are support levels below it — areas where price may find a floor.FXEmpire shows five calculation methods: Classic, Fibonacci, Camarilla, Woodie, and DeMark. Classic is the most widely used.
It depends on your trading style:1min / 5min / 15min / 30min — suited for scalpers and short-term day traders looking at intraday price action.1H / 4H — suited for day traders and swing traders who hold positions for hours to a few days.Daily — the standard reference timeframe for most retail traders. Signals here carry the most weight and are least susceptible to short-term noise.Weekly — suited for position traders and investors with longer holding periods.When signals align across multiple timeframes, the directional conviction is typically stronger.
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