The CCI displays the momentum of the price as a value either above or below zero. When the CCI is above the zero-line, the price has upwards momentum, and when the CCI is below the zero-line, the price has downwards momentum. When the CCI is crossing the zero line, the momentum is switching from one direction to the other. The zero line cross trading system use this change of direction as its entry point and uses the price in relation to the moving average as a direction confirmation. The default trade uses a 1-minute OHLC (Open, High, Low, and Close) bar chart, a 50 bar CCI, a 25 bar CCI, and a 34 bar exponential moving average. The default trading time is any time that the market is open and active, such as the European morning for European markets, and the US morning for both US and European markets. The following step-by-step tutorial of the zero line cross trade will use the YM futures market, but exactly the same steps should be used on whichever markets you are trading with this trade. The trade used in the tutorial is a short trade, using 1 contract, with a target of 20 ticks, and a stop loss of 10 ticks. The stop loss is only used as a last resort, as the zero line cross trade includes an exit signal that should exit the trade before the stop loss is reached. This means that if the 50 bar CCI crosses above the zero-line, the 25 bar CCI should also be above the zero-line, and the price should close above the moving average, and vice versa if the 50 bar CCI crosses below the zero-line. If either the 25 bar CCI is on the wrong side of the zero-line, or the price is on the wrong side of the moving average (i.e. CCI crosses above, while price closes below the moving average), the trade has not met its requirements, and should not be entered. As soon as your entry order has been filled, make sure that your trading software has placed your target and stop-loss orders, or place them manually if necessary. There is no default order type for either the target or stop loss, but for the YM (and usually for all markets), the recommendation is a limit order for the target and a stop order for the stop loss. In the trade shown on the charts, the entry bar is shown is white, and the entry is when the subsequent bar breaks the low of the entry bar, which is at 12270, with a target of 12250, and a stop loss of 12280. For example, if the original trade was a long trade, then the new trade would be a short trade, and vice versa. If a new trade is entered, you should make sure that any pending orders from the previous trade have been canceled, and that new exit orders are placed, either manually, or automatically by your trading software. A trade that is exited because of an exit signal can be either a winning trade or a losing trade, depending upon the price at the exit. There are a number of other possible exit signals, including the 50 bar CCI crossing back over the zero-line (without signaling a new entry), the price crossing back over the moving average, or the low (or high) of the entry bar being broken. The exit signal that works the best will depend upon the market being traded, and therefore should be adjusted accordingly. The targets that are shown on the chart are at 12265 (5 ticks), 12260 (10 ticks), and 12250 (20 ticks), all of which were filled by this trade. If your target order has been filled, then your trade has been a winning trade. If your stop-loss order has been filled, then your trade has been a losing trade.