i did not get personal so i am wondering why you are getting personal.....i was talking about the method you mentioned.......of course if you are willing to wait for alignment it does 'work'....but there are 'slopes' which are too steep or too shallow
I did not make a personalisation, this was a generalisation but based on facts concerning my situation - it is a fact that many people have told me that trend-following cannot work in current markets.
Yes, I am willing to wait for alignment. within the context of my approach, it is the alignment which confirms the trend's strength. Without this it is potentially not a trend but certainly a chart I would avoid trading. It is obvious that following a trend necessitates awaiting for the trend to form, it is not entry on a reversal in anticipation of the trend. From that point of view many traders call trend-following entries late: from the trend-follower's point of view, entry into a strong trend is timely and correct, no matter how long after the previous chart pattern ended.
Slope angles could be a useful way to assess the attractiveness of a trend. The angle varies according to the chart duration and time-frame so in order to be reliable these would have to be standardised for the assessment process and decision-making point. So far I don't find an additional filter like this to be useful but it could be worth looking at.