What is Asian Up and Down
Asian options are based on the average price of the market during a contract’s duration — not just the price at the end.
What is Asian Up?
You are predicting that the average price of the asset during the contract period will be higher than the entry price.
You win if the average market price from start to end is above the price at which the trade started.
Example:
Entry price: 100
Market prices during the trade: 100, 102, 101, 103
Average = (100 + 102 + 101 + 103) / 4 = 101.5
Since 101.5 > 100 → You win!
What is “Asian Down”?
You are predicting that the average price will be lower than the entry price.
You win if the average price during the trade is below the starting price.
Example:
Entry price: 100
Market prices: 99, 98, 100, 97
Average = (99 + 98 + 100 + 97) / 4 = 98.5
Since 98.5 < 100 → You win!
Risk Disclaimer
Trading financial instruments such as derivatives, binary options, and accumulators involves significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors. The strategies discussed in this article are for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always trade responsibly and only invest what you can afford to lose.
How To Set Your Bot
- To access the Bot to use visit money8gg and select the bot labelled Martingale Bot

2. Use the settings as indicated below, change your market to Asians, change your Martingale to 2 (if you prefer mutiplying your stake incase of a loss, if not use 1). Change stake to your preferred stake. Finally always ensure the ticks are 5 and above.

How To Trade
We will be using 3 Indicators – Moving Average (MA), Bollinger Bands, and MACD — to trade Asian Up and Asian Down. Let me break it down for you and explain how to use them together to decide when to trade.
Indicators You’re Using:
Moving Average (MA 9 Close)
A line that smooths out price action by showing the average price over the last 9 candles.
Helps identify trend direction:
If the price is above the MA → uptrend
If the price is below the MA → downtrend
Bollinger Bands (BB 20, 2.0)
It has three lines:
Middle Band: 20-period Moving Average
Upper Band and Lower Band: 2 standard deviations above/below the middle
Use for volatility and possible reversals:
If candles touch the lower band, price may go up soon
If candles touch the upper band, price may go down soon
If bands are tight = low volatility (wait)
If bands expand = high volatility (opportunity)
MACD (12, 26, 9)
Made up of:
- MACD Line (blue)
- Signal Line (orange)
- Histogram (bars that show momentum)
Use for momentum and trend strength:
If MACD crosses above Signal Line → Buy signal
If MACD crosses below Signal Line → Sell signal
Bigger histogram bars = stronger move
When to Trade Asian Up
Look for the following:
- Price above Moving Average
- Candles bouncing from the lower Bollinger Band upward
- MACD crossing above Signal Line with growing green bars
This suggests average price will go higher during the contract → go for Asian Up.
When to Trade Asian Down
Look for the following:
- Price below Moving Average
- Candles touching or falling from the upper Bollinger Band
- MACD crossing below Signal Line with growing red bars
This suggests average price will go lower during the contract → go for Asian Down.
Example:

I hope this makes you a profitable trader and you understand how to Trade Asians Profitably. If you still need further explanation feel free to watch here.
It was a pleasure assisting, If you don’t have an account you can create your account by visiting money8gg.com