Iâve been conversing for a few days with plsnobull over on the âPosition Sizingâ thread and rather than continue to post on that thread off-topic, Iâm inviting him/her over here for an illustration of precision price action scalping concepts (similar to the stuff posted by several folks on Metalâs âSimple Price Approachâ thread).
S/he does not believe itâs possible to have a long string of profitable trades during a strong trending move, nor to suffer little damage in choppy price action. In fact, both are possible with understanding and experience.
Here is an illustration of precision price action scalping concepts during what Al Brooks might refer to as âbarb wireâ. If youâve ever been whipsawed badly, it very likely happened in a price environment similar to this.
Earlier, I made a post here about the price action in a very ugly range. The overall PA indicated long only trades because price had broken decisively through pre-market resistance and made a significant new high and a pullback to that previous resistance zone would constitute an uncomfortable (for longs) but perfectly normal retrace of price. However, a scalper can trade long or short in chop.
As precision scalper you have several reasonable choices here:
1. Position long near the low of the range (96.95-97.00)
2. Position short near the high of the range (97.12-97.19)
3. Buy a break of the previous new high (97.24)
4. Sell a break of the pit opening bar low (96.80)
5. Place bids very close to the 96.85 level with a tight stop
6. Wait for clarity
As a precision scalper you need to position at a level that allows you to escape fairly unscathed. The range was wide and ugly enough that headfakes (failed breaks out of the range) were quite likely. Buying or selling the first break out of that range is dangerous.
Here is a picture of the 5-min price environment at the time:
Notice the reconnaissance is based solely on price; there are no indicators needed. Trend lines and parallel channel lines are useful guides so you can watch how price reacts at those levels.