System 1
Go long when:
- slow MA (240 WMA) is sloping up
- fast MA (21 HMA) is sloping up
- price has made at least one HH and HL (a DB will also be an entry signal, basically you are looking for price to not make a LL)
- entry is on the open of the bar after the signal bar (check this)
- initial stop-loss is located at _____ (not clear)
- exit when the fast MA reverses its slope
System 1b
Go long when:
- slow MA (240 WMA) is sloping up
- fast MA (21 HMA) is sloping up
- price has made at least one HH and HL (a DB will also be an entry signal, basically you are looking for price to not make a LL)
- the close of the signal bar is in the top half of the bar (wait for a bar like this before entering)
- enter with a buy stop order 1 or 2 ticks above the high of the signal bar
- initial stop-loss is located below the low of the signal bar or the bar that precedes it, whichever is lower.
- exit when the fast MA reverses its slope
Focusing on the trades pointed out in the 4 charts that meet the entry requirements, and using only qualitative assessments at this stage, the results are shown below.
System 1b -
Chart 1: win, scratch, small loss, win, win (4 longs and then a short trade that met the rules)
Chart 2: small loss, win, small loss, win, win, win, small loss (all trades are long)
Chart 3: scratch, win, no trade (the sell stop order wasnât hit), small loss, small loss, win, win, no trade (sell stop order not hit), loss
Chart 4: loss, scratch, win, win, small loss, win, small loss,
Net: 13 wins, 10 losses, 3 scratch trades
I really like this type of system because all of the losses are small and the wins are a mixture of small, medium and large gains. The number of wins was over 50% and the average win was bigger than the average loss.
One would need to backtest many more trades and be more quantitative about exact entries and exits to evaluate it properly, but this looks like a promising approach.
An example of 2 losing trades that were avoided using the new rules is shown below: