Quote from cerno:
I simply provided an explanation as to why the absence of Sunday's ES price action is not necessary on that chart. The indicators would look the same if SPY was plotted rather than the ES.
I understand it's a different situation for longer term oscillators that analyze historical price action and require all the preceding data points in order to calculate properly. Oscillators are a measuring device like a ruler, the amount of price movement necessary in the ES to move an oscillator from say a -20 to a +20 reading on your charts is related to how much price movement occurred in the ES over some period of time - and you don't want gaps messing up your calculation. The issue which has seemed to touch a nerve is whether any reading from an oscillator or other technical indicator should be called "support" or "resistance."
Lets assume each of the last 10 times you saw a +20 reading on an oscillator the market reversed. Can we call a +20 reading resistance? An analogy would be dribbling a basketball. If I hold my hand 3 feet off the ground and dribble the ball 100 times in a row can anyone assume my hand will be at the same level on the next dribble. Does the ball reaching 35 inches from the ground on the next bounce mean that resistance is only 1" away because it was there 100 times before? Do I need to see the ball reverse direction 2-3-4 inches before I can say that there was resistance as predicted, and by that point did the + 20 reading mean something or am I relying on the 4 inch retracement for the determination.
The longer term chart you posted demonstrates this phenomena perfectly well. I re-attached it here with a couple of red lines to show you what I mean. I see a long series of small cycles generating fine triggers for your signals. The problem is that when the strong rally occurred, the move quickly exceeded the oscillator's capacity resulting in a false setup it appears, confirmed by the longer term oscillator rolling over. No buy signal was generated because the slow oscilliator went into a slow decline as the market continued to rally. A few days later the same thing happened to even the very slowest oscillator line. Obviously there is an oscillator setting that will work, but how many versions are worth watching all the time and how do you know ahead of time which settings will work tomorrow.
An oscillator can properly tell you if the ball is 35, 36, or 40 inches off the ground, or X points from the low, but it doesn't actually indicate anything about where the "hand" is actually located, the actual sellers that will block the market from continuing to rise.
This is just math and I hope no one is offended by math.
Isn't the hand itself the "resistance", and if any hand shows up with a fist full of futures, options, stocks, or etf's at any particular level won't they have the same effect. This is what I was trying to explain distinguishes technical analysis from the quantitative analysis done by programetrics. They look at all the trading activity actually occurring on many exchanges and if they see the fist of a heavyweight coming to impact the S&P 500 their indicators show it regardless of the price level which it occurs, that is what I would refer to as actual resistance or support. Watching and analyzing all the markets that can impact the big indexes looking for the big fists of hedge funds is just not simple and I don't mind spending money for the assistance when it helps me know when to duck and avoid getting clobbered.
Quote from Specterx:
About 4,000+ hours of screentime I'd say...
Quote from ProfLogic:
Wow . . . you really have a chip on your shoulder when it comes to any conflicting opinion don't you.
The charts you posted are missing the weekend trades. It is impossible to make consistent decisions only using part of the data. Omitting the overnight data doesn't make for accuracy it creates inaccuracy and inconsistent results.
Each part of your data is independent of your collective whole. Your approach isn't unique but through your own words: "The programetrics charts display analysis of program trading on all these instruments simultanenously to provide an overall view of trading activity, "equities" are one indicator and "derivatives" incorporates all the derivative trading including futures and options and etf's." The problem is that it ISN'T an overall view if part of the data is missing. Do you think that if a pharmaceutical company did clinical trials that it would be acceptable to arbitrarily eliminate "part of the data set". Not on your life.
You CAN look simply at the futures market if that is the market you are trading and if your charts are constructed correctly, eliminating the variable aspect of volume in the chart.
The chart I'll attach with this post clearly shows Support and Resistance Oscillations in real time and at 4 different levels; 2 faster oscillations which I use for trading decisions and 2 slower ones (one the bottom) I simply use for strength. The labeled prices and outcomes at the top of the chart are read and created in real-time by the computer. I've created the rules to allow the computer to read those 4 oscillation levels in real-time and as they migrate in real-time. Nothing has to be interpreted . . . just read in real-time.
The first trade rule is simply and you can look on the chart to validate this. Each indicator is made up of an indicator and a histogram. The one in the middle is where your trade decisions are executed. The one on the bottom is simply strength. Now when the indicator, not the histogram on the middle chart is creates an oscillation top (color change from blue to green) and the strength indicator & histogram are both in the opposite direction of your oscillation (Resistance then Strength all down or Support then Strength all up) then a trade is executed in the direction of strength. You will stay with the trade IF every subsequent oscillation results in a Price HH if Long or Price LL if short or is no Divergence or convergence is created at that oscillation, then an exit is immediate.
This is just the first of two trade set-ups that my charts create but the success is based on the accuracy of the data and that all data be used. The charts speak for themselves. You can't find an major draw-downs using these because they don't exist. I can post chart from now until the cows come home and you won't find any problems with any of them in real time.
You have now been shown another example of a chart layout and indicators that show true objective support & resistance in real-time and ALSO show an objective view of strength or lack of at each of those true oscillations. I also repeat . . . having ALL of the data is critical to correct analysis of any chart in any market.
You can see on the chart that on July 10, 2009 at between 3:30 pm EDT and 3:45 pm EDT the chart triggered a Long at about 875.00 that resulted in an 130 point move that exited right before 4 pm EDT on August 12th with the creation of a labeled Prime oscillation designation and confirmed with the small red arrow and subsequent trading indicator oscillation.
My charts are plotted for me by my computer while I sleep and are ready for me when I get up in the morning.
I'm not interested in a pissing contest just to let you know that there are people out here that know what they are doing and that are farther ahead then software that arbitrarily omits data for absolutely no valid reason whatsoever.
The next chart I will post is an intraday chart. Use the same listed rule on it to see the trades there as well.

Quote from obamapips:
Hi Prof,
How do i know whether my data in my chart are correct or not ?
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Quote from cashmoney69:
You need to understand that an indicator will ALWAYS give a late signal because its showing you what already happened.
Quote from pjhaggerty:
Basically what indicators can you use to determine if there is strong support/resistance or weak support/resistance. Thanks for your replies.