ES Journal Archive (2006 - 2008)

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Quote from mbusch:



I'd still like to know what B1S2 was looking at when he stated earlier that the trend was up, because he certainly saw this earlier than I did, so he had to be looking at something that I missed.

60 minute chart is the king of intraday charts. Keep your trading very simple. Bias was long starting Monday afternoon.
 
Bias remains long intraday at this moment in time. These things can change of course, but right now, it is long and I am looking only long. Bias can only change once or perhaps twice (rarely) in a session.

Always use proper risk management. A maximum of 2 percent of liquid assets should be the limit of what is risked on a trade. Less than 2 percent is preferred.
 
Quote from saliva:

When you try to push up the market on less than stellar volume like yesterday, . :D

Volume is an indicator that should be discarded in my view. I classify it as too much information along with being too subjective. --People see what they want to see in volume and the analysis thereof is usually wrong. :)
 
Quote from Buy1Sell2:

Volume is an indicator that should be discarded in my view. I classify it as too much information along with being too subjective. --People see what they want to see in volume and the analysis thereof is usually wrong. :)

When I read statements like this, I just want to shake my head. I do not mean any disrepect here, but volume is much more than an "indicator".

ES, like any auction market, is established on the principles of supply and demand. Pivot levels, support and resistance levels, and other key chart levels represent areas where participants in the past have decided that the price was either too cheap and they had to buy/cover their shorts (support) or that it was too rich and they had to sell/sell short (resistance). Breaking through those levels with adequate levels of participation suggests that those opinions have changed, and that equities in general are being repriced.

If a market "breaks out" to a new high (for the day, for the week, whatever) and there is no buying, price will go back. This is apparent on the charts. Volume has clearly dried up. If there IS buying, price will more likely stay at that new level. If the price hits a new high, and the reaction back to support is on light volume, that suggests that most who bought the new high are not interested in selling. If the pullback is on high volume, that suggests that there is more potential downside, and that those who bought the new high are now holding the bag.

I don't have time to get into all of this now, but suffice to say, the principles of supply and demand apply to all economic enterprises. Futures trading is NOT an exception to the rule.

Good luck to all.
 
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