Originally posted by traderkay
So Kymar would you share with us what concepts from the book you use in daytrading?
There are many concepts developed in E&M's TA OF STOCK TRENDS that I find useful for daytrading - the most important being the way of thinking about the markets and about the typical patterns that develop over the course of trading.
Direct translation of TAST's methods to daytrading isn't always a good idea at all, I don't think, but, in my experience, there's still much even on a very specific level that can be carried over fairly successfully. Though the search for good pattern-based set-ups in the intraday time frame can introduce a danger of what Alan Farley calls "trend relativity error" - the attempt to trade a set-up that is unlikely to resolve within the appropriate time frame - many patterns occur at virtually all tradable "resolutions." You can find tradable flags, pennants, triangles, wedges, head and shoulders patterns, snapbacks, pullbacks, and so on, within day-tradable time frames, often down to the tick chart level.
The E&M playbook can also help you to situate a given day's trading within the longer-term frameworks upon which the authors exclusively concentrate. Multi-day and longer support/resistance levels of the type E&M examine in detail, in conjunction with other critical levels and what others sometimes call "micro-support" or "micro-resistance," normally appear to play significant roles in intraday price movement.
Of course, as with any trading methodologies or insights, E&M probably won't take you very far, in my opinion, if not joined to hard-won experience and understanding of the markets - unless you begin with a great deal of luck, "natural" market-affinity, or conceivably other advantages that might even make books like E&M's more a hindrance than a help.