Quote from gifropan:
If I try and relate this concept to my post the identification of the trend would be the "SetUp" and how you approach the entry would be the "trigger", Am I correct in understanding that in your reply and most of the others' here SetUp and Trigger happen simultaneously?
The setup can be many things. Say you've identified an up trend and want to join the trend. The setup can be a) price pulling back to the trend line (pullback), b) price consolidating in a narrow range after a strong move (flag), c) price channeling down in an orderly fashion after a strong move (flag), d) price narrowing within the boundaries of a containment bar off the previous high (triangle).
The trigger is the price at which the bulls re-assert their dominance for a breakout to a new high.
For a) buyers bid price above the level of a pullback bar.
For b) buyers bid price above the upper boundaries of the range.
For c) buyers bid price above the descending channel line high (channel breakout).
For d) buyers bid price above the containment bar's high.
There are many other valid trigger points, but these are my favorites.
Pure breakouts (price breaking through the latest high of a trend, such as a high of the day) are very low risk/high reward trades for certain trading instruments such as energy futures, currency futures, as well as momentum stocks like AAPL, AMZN, and NFLX.
All these setups/triggers apply to downside action as well. As they say, Bulls climb the stairs and bears jump out the window
