Recipe plus demonstration, even ...

There is no viable strategy without the concept behind it. What is your concept?It seems like a reasonable strategy to buy new all time highs on good volume on smaller companies with a stop below the previous day. For example I initiated a play on TUSK yesterday. Does anyone have experience with this/similar strategy? I have a trailing stop initiated and will hold until the stop is hit.
Theoretical question as well. Whose lunch am I eating by buying these all time highs? Thanks for your opinions and comments.
Your strat sounds so easy to test, just go and test it instead of asking for random opinions
I see you mention "markets" however do you find this is also true for companies? The main reason to support buying breakouts is because of human psycology and the asymetric flow of information. However it would seem that buying a ATH would be coming late to the party.If a market is strong enough to set an ATH, then it's a strong market and for a breakout trader, that can be an entry signal. There are any number of ways to set stops and manage the BO trade. As a pullback trader, I would wait for the pb post-breakout. Sometimes, I won't get an entry and that's OK as I get plenty of signals. Often, my entry will be higher than the breakout entry, and that's also OK.
I think it is the illiquid stocks that will perform the best with this strategy. For the reason of slower information flow.I used to think buying the high was an inferior strategy vs. buying a low. Psychologically, I like getting things at a "discount". Bad move.. at least for the tickers I follow. I did a research on TLT and suprisingly, buying the high with a 5% profit/loss stop performed much better than buy low.TLT is a very liquid stock too.
'the party" is a relative variable. A trader wants a piece of a move, some larger than others but getting all of a move is a rare thing. Breaking an ATH can well signal the start of a new "party".I see you mention "markets" however do you find this is also true for companies? The main reason to support buying breakouts is because of human psycology and the asymetric flow of information. However it would seem that buying a ATH would be coming late to the party.
Sorry I do not understand the second part of this post. Can you explain? ThanksIt depends on the reason of making new highs, if it was cause the "street" was wrong and it made a new high like a bullet, then I fade that, but if the bar's ranges were sort of evenly averaged on a milder angle and right after trend change or having a "thrust" bar then retracement that happens over several bars, then buying a high I would be a buyer.