Quote from bstay:
NoDoji,
I'm sorry I did not follow your many many posts. What instruments do you trade currently? equities/futures/options/oil/gold/silver/forex? i enjoyed your last post.
Thanks! I swing trade equities in some retirement accounts and I day trade mostly oil futures and some ES.
I occasionally watch silver for amusement purposes only; I would never try it at home.
Quote from No.Heat:
No Doji,
This is all beautiful in a perfect world, but in the real world price chops a whole lot more than it trends.
You know how many closes above or below the 20 EMA one gets in the 5min chart that mean absolutely nothing ?
I posted on the BAR BY BAR thread recently something regarding this: "The environment surrounding a setup is as important as the price bar or multi-bar pattern itself."
During range/chop, you can sit on the sidelines until a trend or breakout sets up, or you can learn to trade a range. A moving average flattens during range/chop, meaning price will close below and above it perhaps multiple times until clarity and direction appear.
In a well-defined uptrend, however, price will rarely close below the 20-period MA for more than one price bar. Look at oil futures today (CL) once price closed above the 20-bar MA on the 5-min chart. Price continued to trend up through five pushes and close above the 20 MA for over two hours before a shooting star at an extreme (new high) signaled a possible reversal or a consolidation range.
What I posted here on this thread was: Your goal is to capture significant profits on "more often" with-trend price swings and to limit losses when the "not" occurs.
In a perfect world all trades would be winners. There's an overwhelming belief that emerges on ET that says TA is crap, price action trading is crap, trading is totally random, you can't win, blah, blah, blah, simply because higher probability setups are not fool-proof.
I worked with a trader last year who kept asking me at the end of my trades how I knew price was going to do "X". I would explain that I didn't know, that I never know where price will go on a trade, only that more often than not when a particular pattern appears, price move "X" follows. Because of the time and effort I put into developing my trading plan, a majority of my trades would go to the price target I expected. So he thought I somehow knew price was going to do that, even though at the time I put on the trade, the chart looked a bit "iffy" at the hard right edge. He thought there was some signal in the setup that
ensured success, but there is no certainty in trading.
You look for odds in your favor (trends attract more players in the direction of the trend), and you implement a risk:reward ratio that allows you to profit from the "edge".
Here is my entire post from the BAR BY BAR thread:
Quote from NoDoji:
I have over 100 spreadsheets over a 10-month time period that defined and refined high probability setups and trade management methods for the instrument I trade, derived from daily manual bar-by-bar analysis.
What I looked for in high probability setups were setups that resulted in a move to a minimum profit target at least 70% of the time. When I combine this positive expectancy with a positive reward:risk ratio, the net result is fantastic.
The environment surrounding a setup is as important as the price bar or multi-bar pattern itself. For example, many traders notice a price bar that closes as a hammer or shooting star at the end of an extreme trending move is a reversal signal far more often than not.
But such a price bar is often a trap when it occurs in the middle of a trending move or in a range/channel. Inexperienced traders will take a counter-trend trade following the close of such a bar and end up selling near a low tick or buying near a high tick. They'll then conclude that "TA is worthless, because more than half the time these setups fail. The market is random. You may as well flip a coin."
Al Brooks describes this and many other price action concepts in his book. Take what you like and adapt it to your trading style; discard what you find useless. Do your own research/testing, develop a trading plan, and follow it.