Exit position using Price Action

Quote from Rorschach_test:

can you please elaborate on this?how do you figure the clear indication of the slowing down price with LTL?it is contrary to my view,when the LTL expands it`s a clear indication of continuation.or may be there is some sort os misunderstanding on my part.

I think we are on the same page, but perhaps we got the channels being discussed confused. The fastest channel (yellow) failed to be expanded by a pretty wide margin. See attached.
 

Attachments

Quote from llIHeroic:

I think we are on the same page, but perhaps we got the channels being discussed confused. The fastest channel (yellow) failed to be expanded by a pretty wide margin. See attached.

thx

quick follow up.why the yellow most important?
 
Sorry for butting in, but the Price Action part of the title caught my interest, and there appears to be some confusion over these channels.

Price moves up and down. Sometimes these movements become trends. These trends can be tracked by trendlines. However, trendlines do not necessarily form channels. Channels have a specific function, but if the instrument is not mean-reverting, whatever channels appear to be there may exist only in the imagination.

This does not mean that trendlines cannot be used to trigger an exit. To the contrary, they are among the best -- if not the best -- triggers. If nothing else, they don't require any calculation. Channels, however, particularly if the trader is torturing price into fitting into one, can quickly become useless, especially if one is getting into channels within channels within channels within . . .

As you were.
 
It seems I am creating over-complication in an attempt to clarify the information I had in my head when looking at the chart. I call these 'channels' for lack of a better vocabulary word to use for them.

The yellow supply line tracks the current movement of price. The "LTL" on the other side of the yellow supply line I use to measure pace.

I drew the blue line in order to measure the distance from the first swing high which begins the yellow line to the following swing low. Both occur within one bar. The second swing high on the yellow line and the subsequent low is only able to cover about half the distance of the first thrust downwards.

A slowing of pace, nothing more, but one which I have found quite accurate in giving an indication of an impending change in sentiment before any of the "containers" we make for price is actually broken.
 
Quote from llIHeroic:



A slowing of pace, nothing more, but one which I have found quite accurate in giving an indication of an impending change in sentiment before any of the "containers" we make for price is actually broken.

and yet,what gives you a confidence that the pace is slowing down,prior to the channel BO?you`ll never know if the price continues or rverses until it`s within the channel.
 
Quote from Rorschach_test:

and yet,what gives you a confidence that the pace is slowing down,prior to the channel BO?you`ll never know if the price continues or rverses until it`s within the channel.

The last two bars on the 10m chart you posted show it beginning to reverse already after a thrust that only covered half the distance of the first one, so I am anticipating a BO already before price has even touched the RTL again. If it's an FBO we can either exit or go short again.
 
Quote from llIHeroic:



I drew the blue line in order to measure the distance from the first swing high which begins the yellow line to the following swing low. Both occur within one bar. The second swing high on the yellow line and the subsequent low is only able to cover about half the distance of the first thrust downwards.
.

ok,then what did you mean by ''it would need to hit blue line to maintain the pace"?i don`t quite understand.what should hit the blue line if it wass just the measurment of the 2 points in a channel?
 
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