Quote from Spydertrader:
1. Learn to properly annotate a chart, and that which you fail to see should jump right out at you from the screen.
2. Start at 13:45 ES [close of] Bar. Your chart failed to show a Traverse which begins right here.
3. This traverse (which you failed to annotate) leads into a Lateral (after the traverse completes its sequences).
4. Hmmmm. A down traverse, followed by a Lateral Traverse. I wonder what must come next.
5. Do you have, on the chart, that which must come next when you see this signal for change?
6. If not, then you do not have permission to seek a change in mode.
- Spydertrader
If you could clarify 5 and 6 highlighted in red, please.
Strictly for the purposes of studying the static EOD charts to learn the correct way to annotate:
If I am scrolling bar by bar, for example, yesterday's static EOD chart.
Prior to arriving at 14:45 [close of] bar I have drawn in some lines which I
think annotate the market action.
As shown in (A) portion of the attached picture, I find myself at 14:45 EST exactly, since the charts are static.
And based on whatever lines I have drawn - trendlines, gaussians, etc. (
I would not call them correct annotations just yet) - I arrive at
hypothesis that 14:45 [close of] represents a Vocabulary Word defined as a signal for change which develops at a specific Point in Time (
specific point of change at a specific point in time, where a Traverse Level trader has permission to seek change).
After scrolling a few more bars I find myself in the (B) portion of the attached picture and see that What Must Come Next after 14:45 [close of], if my previous
hypothesis was right,
did not.
Does it mean that in this specific situation (or any other similar situation, where WMCN did not) the market have already (
prior to 14:45) conveyed something (some information) indicating that 14:45 [close of]
can not be specific point of change at a specific point in time, where a Traverse Level trader has permission to seek change.
And therefore one can go back and discover the correct way to annotate that period and find the subtle differences one may have missed the first time.
Is this what the expression: "all you need is in the charts" or "the answers can be found in the charts" refers to?