1. Yes I meant second ENTRY, not second exit when after the breakout occurs, the market pulls back to the 1BB channel line. Sorry about that.
2. If a breakout occurs to the downside, for example, and it is a strong directional move, it should not move back to the center line or really close above it. I would say that in most cases if it does so, the breakout was a false one and getting out is a good idea. Therefore, that is why I say that when you jump in on the breakout, a stop at a close above the middle line is a logical place for the stop but not the only place. So if you wish to give it more room for wiggle, then that is fine as long as it is logical (calling Mr. Spock).
3. I am looking for a close above the 1BB band into the channel for a trend beginning indicator. I say a CLOSE, because it is not uncommon for the market to move up into the channel and then pull back to the middle. The BBs I have update on each tick so they may expand on the initial move and then flatten as the market moves back to the middle. To avoid getting suckered into the initial fake (which happens a lot in the 12:00 to 2:00 area where it dips and jumps and pulls back), I want a close into the channel.
Also, the move into the channel should be on a decent size candle on a candlestick chart. This shows more strength then if it pops into the channel on a doji. Also a volume spike adds more credibility.
Finally the one exception to waiting for the close is if the market starts diving fast or jumping up fast. You will know it when you see it and you can just jump in on the move. It will usually keep running or pullback. If you missed it you can still wait for the close and scalp some more on the move but you might have missed a chunk of it. If the move is really strong it will probably not pull back to the 1 BB band and thus no second chance for entry. Therefore, if you see a nice long candle forming into the channel you can go in.
To see what I mean look at a Pound future chart from today using 5 minute time frame and see what happened at 4:35 AM. Gap down into channel and price diving. No need to wait for a close since the signal is clear. Even if you waited for the close you can see the market still dropped another 30 - 40 pips.
I have been working on this only since last summer so I have not traded it extensively but I am always studying the charts to gain a familiarity with the patterns.
Also on todays Pound Fx futures chart look at 8:00 AM for a breakout which moved nicely initially and then sputtered. You coudl have scalped 30 pips or so but you will see that the market started sliding back to the 1 BB, barely bounced off and then dropped more to the EMAs and moved right through.
One way to deal with this is scale out of a portion of the position after a large move and set the stop to near your entry so if it eventually deteriorates, you still have a profit.
Quote from Salzburg:
OPTIONSCOPE,
<I> . . . price may peek into the upper channel but I want it to CLOSE up into the channel on a breakout for me to go long or short and then you see how it runs in between the 2 channels. </I>
I understand: a range expansion with a close in the channel.
<I> I see this on the indexes mostly where it drops, for example, and then after a some nice long drops it moves sideways and then moves out of the sideway consolidation out of the channel upwards. <b> Good indication of trend reversal for the short-term. </b> </I>
<I> 1. The stock pulls back within 1 or 2 bars on a 5 minute chart for example, back to the 1 stdev BB line and continues the move lower. This not only gives you confirmation but also gives you a second exit should you miss the breakout. </i>
A second entry, no? A second entry at the test?
<I> Simply wait for another bar or two after the breakout and go short in this example at the 1 stedev BB band with a stop above the middle of the channel. Nice tight stop with good entry. </I>
My inclination would be to give it a little more room, but thatâs not to contradict you. Youâve seen the set up more often than I.
<I> 2. The stock drops for a few bars and then pulls back to 20 or 40 EMA moving support. This is important to remember. If the breakout lower is strong, at some point it will pullback to MA resistance and this is not a trend reversal per se. You can go short again at the MA resistance with a tight stop on a close above the MAs or use the MAs as a trailing stop. This works great on a super diving breakout. The market usually avoids such a pullback and the 20 or 40 day MA is a great trailing stop keeping you in the trade. The 1 stdev BB is also a good trailing stop to exit half the position. </I>
Iâm more into the standard error bands as a trailing stop, but hey, youâve been generous in explaining all of this so carefully. I particularly like the channel idea because itâs a nice conceptual aid. I guess one could also identify the set up and then place a resting order at so-and-so-many ATRs away from the price action â and just get oneself stopped in. Do you ever do that? Although that wouldnât always fill your CLOSE > (or <) than the channel line. You wrote: <I> I want it to CLOSE up into the channel on a breakout</I>. But that doesnât necessarily mean a close greater than the 3 sigma line, right? Just up into the channel between the 1-sigma and the 3-sigma, with the expansion. Any thoughts on volume?
I have'nt taken a close look at you ES on 2/7 image yet. Maybe early tomorrow or late p.m. today.