Robert Morse
Sponsor
I would say the most common way this is used is to use a market on close order vs an hour or a day or a week.Time-stops mean if the stock doesn't move up upon purchase after some time, you exit.
I would say the most common way this is used is to use a market on close order vs an hour or a day or a week.Time-stops mean if the stock doesn't move up upon purchase after some time, you exit.
if on the chart the index goes up in a 45 degree angle, anything going up less than 35 degree angle gets cut
This part has me beat. What is 45 degrees.....?
Gann talks about this.
If X = time and Y = price there is an apples and oranges scenario, so how do you get an angle of 45 degrees?
Time might be a 1 hr chart, then you turn it into a daily chart, Y price axis remains constant, X time axis varies....
Truely a mystery to me.
Please explain.
What you said makes sense. What Handle123 said also makes sense. Both are contradictory but hard to argue one is right and the other is wrong.
Time is also money. I can argue that traders don't jump ship with the intention to drown. They jump ship with the intention of hopping onto a faster ship. Problem is ... the former happens sometimes.
What is O, T, M?T = O
O = M
~ T can = M but depends on O
What is O, T, M?
This part has me beat. What is 45 degrees.....?
Gann talks about this.
If X = time and Y = price there is an apples and oranges scenario, so how do you get an angle of 45 degrees?
Time might be a 1 hr chart, then you turn it into a daily chart, Y price axis remains constant, X time axis varies....
Truely a mystery to me.
Please explain.
In fact, almost all books that I read don't talk about time-stops. Stops are about prices, not time.
"Experience has proved to me that the real money made in speculating has been SHOWING A PROFIT RIGHT FROM THE START. I made my first trade at the psychological time that is, at a time where the force of the movement was so strong that it simply had to carry through. There have been many times when I, like many others, have not had the patience to wait for the sure thing, I wanted to have and interest at all times.
If the stock does not act as I anticipated, I exit immediately the time is not yet ripe - so I close out."
- Livermore