Quote from PointOne:
I still fail to see why a traverse level trader cannot make informed decisions and actions throughout the day in question using the ES only. Am I the only one?
One more go:
I've annotated some of my observations on your chart for discussion (see also my last couple of posts and also Mr Black's chart, which is closest to my view*).
Please advise where I have gone off track in my analysis for a traverse level trader. Clearly neither of the 2 possible channels completed a traverse post Point 3, but why would that concern the traverse level trader who is timing his entries off tapes and volume?
Consider also this beautifully concise description from Jack where he states trends can fail their first dominant traverse after P3 (and by implication this is not knowable before P3):
A trend begins and price moves with the trend. Then a retrace occurs. Then a resumption of the trend occurs. All trends exhibit these three things. From this point on the process can repeat or the final resumption could be happening.
A traverse in the direction of a trend is dominant because volume is increasing during such a traverse. Non-dominant traverse are characterized by decreasing volume. these are retraces. Volume peaks end dominant traverse. volume troughs end non dominant traverses.
There is always a last and final dominant traverse of a trend that fails to get to the other side of the channel. It is called a Failure To Traverse (FTT).
Finally a serious question to all:
are you happy to say that bar 8 was not peak volume? Could you explain this to an impartial friend and keep a straight face? If you asked a 10 year old to point out the peaks in volume, which bars do you think he would choose?
Honest answers please.
[* hindsight, not real time.]