I do not dispute that it says something, but acting on that information does not necessarily give you a positive expectancy. I value simple and exponetial moving averages highly, but that doesn't mean they carry a positive edge blindly using them.Quote from Indrionas:
A squigly line itself doesn't tell me anything. But the value of indicator might tell me something.
That may be a worthwhile thing to do. What I suggest to you is that you take every signal where that is true. If you don't make $$ with it, then it has no edge. If you add other rules, some of them discretionary, then you are leaving the realm of empirical science.Anyway, the only indicator based rule I've added to my rules database is ADX(14)>40 (and its opposite). What it tells me is the strength of directional movement (above highs and below lows). This rule might be useful for patterns that are used in range extension strategies.
Oh, I never said that either. You definitely can. Indicators aren't them though.I'm sorry I forgot to mention that I'm only interested in daily bar patterns. I doubt you can find any meaningful patterns in intraday data,
Right, volatility is easier to predict than direction.my basis for that is that intraday volatility is very unpredictable and there is too much noise, and also I'm not an intraday trader. More precisely, I'm looking for patterns to predict increased volatility.
I do not believe it is impossible to predict tomorrows direction with greater than 50/50 probability.IMO it's impossible to predict the direction of tomorrows price (it's 50/50). What I'm looking for are patterns that might suggest that there is a great possibility of wider range tomorrow, so I can take a risk and trade in some direction (long or short).
Crable does things that are extremely sophisticated and are not mentioned in those books. You cannot even come close to hoping to emulate them without lots of capital. He employs something on the order of several hundred strategies _at_once_. I do not know much about Trout's approach.I believe this approach to trading is valid. There is a great example of this concept in Toby Crabel's book "Day Trading With Short Term Price Patterns and Opening Range Breakout". Also, a similar approach was used by Monroe Trout (he mentions pattern mining in The New Market Wizards book interview). Both Crabel and Trout are known for very consistent low-risk results, and both of them came from the same Niederhoffer school.
I will look into that. Interestingly, I see lots of people that point to acrary's articles on ET. I never found anything of use in them, but that may say more about me than about acrary.And then there's this guy Acrary (Alan Crary) who mentioned these two trading gurus and his approach to model building seems similar. Instead of using association-rule mining he used neural networks and genetic algorithms to mine patterns. Somewhere in this forum he posted a tradestation code with an example of how a pattern based strategy looks like (post ID 249509) http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&postid=249511#post249511 . This is where I took my ideas from.
yw.So I guess this is applied to intraday trading.
Thanks for response. I will try to read that PDF file you linked.
nitro