I'm having trouble with my trading

You can also do a measured move up based on on the height of the sideways move at the bottom of the chart. Look to the right at this price level (top of the blue MM) and you will see a small pause in PA as some bull take some profits off the table at this level.

The larger black measured moved is based upon entry of the position and the start of the reversal at the bottom of the chart.


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I appreciate you volpri. I will respond to your post when I get off work tonight. Thanks for the analysis.
 
I hope I have helped
Helped perhaps for leadership of men and gals but humility means little for markets imo.

It don’t care you are proud..humble..a jerk or meek. Just don’t care. It will empty the pockets of all...rich or poor.

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I have posted this vid before. It's about 15mins, with many nuggets! I am not associated in any way with this guy or anything he may promote. Additionally, this is not a recommendation of any kind regarding specific strategy, usage, setup, or anything else. There are several nuggets within, that if taken from the point of view of trading to trade well, that can be applied to ANY strategy.



HTH

Thank you tiddlywinks,

Very good post. One thing I learned from this video is the continuation of risk adjustment after entering the trade just as volpri has stated. The guy adjust his stop loss for logical reasoning. Regardless of strategy this makes sense, cause one the trade is placed, we can't control the market , but we can control our risk.
 
I would add one can control risk, but also ones assessment of probabilities, reward, risk as a trade unfolds. The problem is traders make an initial assessment and since they are looking for certainty in the markets (and there is none and never will be) they tend to stick hard and fast to their initial trade structure REGARDLESS of what pressures subsequently are screaming at the trader. No sir...it is “damn the torpedos full speed ahead. I am sticking to my SL and my PT and I don’t give a toot what the market is saying after I structure my trade and take a position.” After all they have been taught.. “never move your SL”. This sounds good on the surface but is IMO pure unadulterated

volpri,

This is very good post. Now I know what it means when i use to read "a trader can control risk"
I was BIG believer in set the stop loss, set the profit target and walk away. I always questioned this with my trading. Lately, I have been adjust my profit target when the market makes unknown support and levels I was unaware of while the trade on. But I need to get better with adjust the stop loss as well.

There has been countless times where I have been up in the money, and trade turn around on me and I take a loss, respsecting the stop loss, and saying "My PT will be hit soon, I will just wait to get some good RR" lol. The feeling afterwards is never good.
 
Excellent write up volpri and its appreciated. I like the price action discussion. I read the chart similar. A few questions and comments.

E. Then I take a position (long or short) and at the same time set my initial SL and PT.

1. Is there a max risk you will take per trade? For example, 30 tick max risk?

2. When you set your SL and PT, do you always go for RR > 1 or you don't consider it and just setup trade.

3. I would choose the big green bar as my signal long bar and the next bar as the entry long bar. Why not choose the bull bar as signal bar below indicated with black arrow?


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@simple...if you find this useful i will continue with more and explain how I would trade the area you traded. If not, tell me and I won’t spend more time on it as it does take some time to mark up the chart and give some explanations.

Thank you volpri for the chart analysis. Yes, please continue when you have time. I really appreciate it. Take your time.
 
Excellent write up volpri and its appreciated. I like the price action discussion. I read the chart similar. A few questions and comments.



1. Is there a max risk you will take per trade? For example, 30 tick max risk?

2. When you set your SL and PT, do you always go for RR > 1 or you don't consider it and just setup trade.

3. I would choose the big green bar as my signal long bar and the next bar as the entry long bar. Why not choose the bull bar as signal bar below indicated with black arrow?


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1) With the ES I don’t like to risk more than 5 points per contract and prefer to keep it within 2 points. Nevertheless, i set SL ‘s based on PA to the left. If the logical PA SL is more than 5 points I would seriously consider skipping the trade or waiting for a PB and possible resumption that will give me a closer SL. Breakouts usually need to have large initial SL’s. I know that sounds backwards but see 75% to 80% of attempts at BO’s fail. So, if a bull BO fails there can be a deep PB. Example:

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So you got a bull bo. If you entered on that first or second bull bar the proper SL is below that first bull bar. Then you get a bear reversal/BO south. If you held your long through this deep pb and say added to your position you would still be in your trade. But if you had a closer SL you might be out with a loss. BO’ can have deep pb’s because the other side is ALWAYS gonna try to make them fail. If you dial down to a smaller TF you will see exactly what these BO’s broke out from.

2) I generally skip a trade if I think it won’t give me at least a min scalp. I consider that to be 1 point in the ES. So, I ask myself “according to PA in front of me do I think the market will go in my favor 1 point before it goes against me 1 point?” If the probability favors it will then I will take a position with at least the min reward of one Point for a PT but that can change very quickly based on how the market acted after I took my position. Based upon how far the actual Risk was before the market went in my favor. Said another way I want at least a 1:1 structure but will change that rapidly depending on how the market responds after my entry.

3) ok we get a BO and shortly thereafter that big green bull bar. Why don’t I enter there? I could but remember 80% of BO attempts fail. Look at the bar before it. While also a bull bar it has a huge tail on top and close near its low. That means sellers were trying to reverse the BO. Additionally, Look at the 4 bars prior to that big green bar you mentioned. All of them have tails on top...= sellers trying to reverse price back into the blue lines sideways move. They are trying to reverse the BO. So I don’t go long on the big bull bar you mentioned because I want to see a pb after the BO that stays above the top of the BO point which is the top blue line. I wants to see some bearish action fail to push price back down into those blue lines. I see that happen on the next bar after that big bull bar followed by bulls then exerting on the bull bar after that red bar failure by bears to push price down. When I see that gap (yellow) then I know this is a higher probability trade. So, two bars later (after last bear attempt) I am long. I could enter on the bar you mentioned but it is a lower probability trade.
 
1) With the ES I don’t like to risk more than 5 points per contract and prefer to keep it within 2 points. Nevertheless, i set SL ‘s based on PA to the left. If the logical PA SL is more than 5 points I would seriously consider skipping the trade or waiting for a PB and possible resumption that will give me a closer SL. Breakouts usually need to have large initial SL’s. I know that sounds backwards but see 75% to 80% of attempts at BO’s fail. So, if a bull BO fails there can be a deep PB. Example:

View attachment 202482






So you got a bull bo. If you entered on that first or second bull bar the proper SL is below that first bull bar. Then you get a bear reversal/BO south. If you held your long through this deep pb and say added to your position you would still be in your trade. But if you had a closer SL you might be out with a loss. BO’ can have deep pb’s because the other side is ALWAYS gonna try to make them fail. If you dial down to a smaller TF you will see exactly what these BO’s broke out from.

2) I generally skip a trade if I think it won’t give me at least a min scalp. I consider that to be 1 point in the ES. So, I ask myself “according to PA in front of me do I think the market will go in my favor 1 point before it goes against me 1 point?” If the probability favors it will then I will take a position with at least the min reward of one Point for a PT but that can change very quickly based on how the market acted after I took my position. Based upon how far the actual Risk was before the market went in my favor. Said another way I want at least a 1:1 structure but will change that rapidly depending on how the market responds after my entry.

3) ok we get a BO and shortly thereafter that big green bull bar. Why don’t I enter there? I could but remember 80% of BO attempts fail. Look at the bar before it. While also a bull bar it has a huge tail on top and close near its low. That means sellers were trying to reverse the BO. Additionally, Look at the 4 bars prior to that big green bar you mentioned. All of them have tails on top...= sellers trying to reverse price back into the blue lines sideways move. They are trying to reverse the BO. So I don’t go long on the big bull bar you mentioned because I want to see a pb after the BO that stays above the top of the BO point which is the top blue line. I wants to see some bearish action fail to push price back down into those blue lines. I see that happen on the next bar after that big bull bar followed by bulls then exerting on the bull bar after that red bar failure by bears to push price down. When I see that gap (yellow) then I know this is a higher probability trade. So, two bars later (after last bear attempt) I am long. I could enter on the bar you mentioned but it is a lower probability trade.

Thank you very much for your analysis and response volpri. I make sense to me.
 
Well look at it this way. It is a good thing to structure a trade and plan, but the market knows nothing of my plans or my structure. So, if the market doesn’t go per my plan I have a choice. 1) Adapt my plan to the market or

2) be bull-headed and stick with the plan as in “damn the torpedos full speed ahead.”

Generally, in life..most of life never..hardly ever, might be better ..goes as planned.

I once planned a big project in Central America. I headed up a team and we launched the project. The original plan called for one year. After 1 year it was barely starting to be successful. It ended up being 5 years to see good success. Now it has been around 11 years and the success has been amazing and jaw dropping. However, many obstacles had to be overcome along the way. Many variables we didn’t didn’t even expect to enter the picture or even know existed when we first started presented themselves. Over and over we failed until we found what would work. But we found what worked by being persistent until it appeared on the scene. Then we had to adapt on the fly.

There is something to be said about having a general plan for anything but one must, on the other hand, be flexible enough to adapt as things move along. Just sticking to a plan don’t make it work.

Trading is the same. I am not just gonna sit there and let the market take out my SL. I HAVE A MAX SL that I will suffer, if need be, but I figure if PA reaches it then my plan was wrong and I probably need to double up and go the other way. Also, if I see something transpire in subsequent PA after I take a position that makes me realize (even though my SL hasn’t been hit) I am probably wrong then I will jump ship before price hits my SL. Why should I plant my SL in unmoveable concrete. That is basically what the gurus and pundits tell us. Listen the market doesn't care about my SL. I placed where I placed it because of some premise or belief I have about PA. But if my premise seems to maybe be wrong in a particular case and I see this as dynamic PA unfolds then I know I will soon have to make a decision about my SL.

1) either get out NOW and mitigate my losses.

2) widen my SL to give the market a little more room without taking me out.

3) widen it to my max amount that will prove to me I am wrong and must get out if it gets hit.

I know..someone will say well why not just put it there to start with? Well because I don’t want to be stubborn and just say “regardless of what subsequent PA does or how it acts I am leaving the max SL to be taken out.” Plus, i may see something I missed when I placed my initial SL perhaps I see this on another TF after my entry and become convinced I need to change it to accommodate the new info. Everything thing I do in trading is subject to change if need be. . My planned entry...my PT...my SL. My actual exit. EVERYTHING. I CAN MISS BEING IN SYNC AND HAVE TO JUMP SHIP. I CAN BE IN SYNC BUT AT THE MOMENT NOT REALIZE JUST HOW MUCH IN SYNC I WAS SO I NEED TO WIDEN MY PT.

If the market changes then my parameters need to change. Anyway, that is how I look at it. But I am a discretionary trader.

Volpri,

I like your comments.

I agree with you are saying regarding moving the SL and PT as needed. I really agree with that.

I like to explain my thinking with chart examples.

Breakout scenario.

Green arrow entry
Blue arrow PT
Red arrow SL.

I enter, what shall a trader do now:

A. Breakeven
B. Wait a few bars, and take small loss
C. Hold on and wait for profit target. Let the trade play out.

Well here is what I did after entry and the big red bar.

1. Move my stop to the black arrow.
2. Move my PT to the light blue arrow.

Go stop out for a loss of money.

In conclusion, moving the PT made logical sense. Moving the stop loss, not so well. I should kept SL where it was til after that big green bar reversal. It is what it is. :cool:

So yes, I agree with you. You can have good plan or initial trade structure, but as we clearly know, the market may have another plan, and that is where Uncertainty rules, and causes for changes in our trade parameters. I will accept being wrong in moving my SL to to early, but moving that PT downwards was a good idea as the market told me "I don't care about your stinky profit target you got from somewhere, i am stopping price here, there, take that"






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Good deal. Good play.

With that big bar BO you entered on you would expect better follow through to reach your profit target (dark blue). When that big bar was followed by 2 small bull bars then a bear bar you know things are in a PB that would most likely morph into a sideways move at the least and perhaps even a reversal. Just not good FT on that big bull BO bar to hang in their hoping for it to reach your PT (dark Blue).

So, with the new info that says the BO is probably going to fail or it would have had better follow through. So, knowing THAT you leave your original SL in place wait till after the PB (and you really don't have to worry about the first PB being too deep as everything to the left says buying has been strong.) So in view of that buying strength to the left most likely you will get a test of that high before any reversal. So with some adjustment in your SL and PT you should be able to get out with a smaller profit (light blue) instead of a loss waiting for your original PT to be hit and it wasn't. An if all that turned out wrong and you had to take a loss and it would be a lot less.

It is certainly a valid assumption that price will test the high again so you will be able to get out with a profit albeit, less than your original plan.

See, with initial SL and PT those are our BEST guesses. But when the dynamic of PA begins to unfold we must adapt them if necessary.

Good trading!

The next trade would be after that BO south out of the top mini range. Notice the first PB after that BO south barely made it to touch the bottom of the mini range after your exit. So, the play would be to short after the PB on a lower low after the first bear bar in the PB. Then of course it sailed south....
 
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