Quote from Corallus:
Yes, and what a trick it IS!! Most of the time it's hard to tell the difference. db, do you have any techniques for differentiating between reversals and chop?
I don't know that I'd call them "techniques". Rather looking for something that will make holders skittish, whether long or short. If, for example, price is just meandering aimlessly around, there is no point! at which one might feel as though he's missing something. Whereas if price were to take off and wake everybody up, then pull back a bit, traders who thought that something might be afoot and that they were missing out would more likely jump in with at least a tight stop just on the offchance that something might actually be going on.
Therefore, you most likely will want to avoid overlapping bars. You want to see movement in one direction or another. Or both. such as with Ms and Ws. Today, for example, there was a clear M or double top. At least in the NQ. And if one had entered below the midpoint of the M, he would have made 5-8 points, depending on his exit plan. Or he could have taken an earlier entry following the same concept of rattling people and scaring them into a sell. Or a short. This often occurs - in the case of a long - when price drops below the last reaction low. In this case, the LRL on the NQ was at 1240 on the 5m. If the 1345 move up had not been a second attempt, they might just have held. But since it was the second, they were on alert. And when price fell below their entry price, they decided to bail. So a stop placed just below that LRL would have netted up to 15 pts.
Another thing to look for is a very tight and lengthy range, such as occurred in the NQ on 11/15. This had an upside bias anyway, but price could just as easily have fallen out of the bottom as broken out of the top, so entering early would not have been smart. And there was plenty of time after the breakout for price to accomplish something, whereas these sometimes break out so late that time runs out.
Trend, of course, is defined by higher highs and higher lows, or lower highs and lower lows. If you don't have either, you've got chop. You've also got a lot of overlapping bars. And you'll probably wind up with a coil, such as we had most of the morning. So if you happen to be nodding off and you see what looks like a mixture of higher highs and lower lows or vice-versa and it's hard to tell whether there's a trend at all, look to see if there are a lot of overlapping bars. They're an early indication of trendlessness.
--Db