Jack Hershey Method: Channels

Quote from Bearbelly:

Just an interested bystander but I thought point 1 was an ftt. A lot of this posters point ones dont appear to be ftt's but Im no expert by any means and it is hard for me to see the trendlines on these charts..

Usually, a point one is an FTT, that is correct. However, if price breaches the left side of former channel on a subsequent bar, then point one can be a full traverse of the former channel.

I did notice upon review that CL is not connecting the dots. Your first trendline should connect points one and three. Your second trendline should run across point two, parrallel to the first trendline.

One more thing to CL...One chart at EOD will do.

Best Regards
Oddi
 
Quote from oddiduro:

Usually, a point one is an FTT, that is correct. However, if price breaches the left side of former channel on a subsequent bar, then point one can be a full traverse of the former channel.

I did notice upon review that CL is not connecting the dots. Your first trendline should connect points one and three. Your second trendline should run across point two, parrallel to the first trendline.

One more thing to CL...One chart at EOD will do.

Best Regards
Oddi

In some cases point 3 is " blown out". Annotate regardless ?
 

Attachments

Quote from Chicken Little:

Oddiduro:

These channels are drawn using the following logic:

One pair of bars constitute the minimum channel.
On a new channel the first line is drawn in the new direction by connecting point 1 to the min/max of the bar pointing in the new direction. Then a parallel line is placed from the min/max of bar 2.

For example, the channel is downward sloping i.e., as x increases y decreases. On the first bar to exceed the high of the previous bar a new channel is drawn. The point 1 is the low of the previous bar and the first line is drawn between the low of the previous bar and the low of the current bar. Then a parallel line is draw from the top of the current bar.

If the channel is widened, a new parallel is drawn from the min/max of the bar widening the channel.

Restate quoted in red.
 
Quote from Chicken Little:

Restate quoted in red.

I do not understand what you are getting at with your last post, please clarify.

With regards to your channels, DO NOT ANTICIPATE point 3. Point three develops when point three develops. Put another way, these are PIVOT points. If there is no pivot, there is no point.

Regards
Oddi
 
To clarify a pivot, look for a low flanked by a higher low on each side, or a high flanked by a lower high on each side. Please label your points 1, 2, and 3 based on these criteria. Your charts will look differently.

Regards
Oddi
 
Quote from oddiduro:

I do not understand what you are getting at with your last post, please clarify.

With regards to your channels, DO NOT ANTICIPATE point 3. Point three develops when point three develops. Put another way, these are PIVOT points. If there is no pivot, there is no point.

Regards
Oddi

I said two pairs of bars when I should have said a (one) pair of bars.

If a channel is upward sloping i.e., as x increases y increases then by definition point 3 must lie greater than both 1x and 1y.

So if I am trying to identify point 3 and it "would be" below point 1 it would invalidate itself as point 3 and instead be a continuation of the previous channel, correct ?

Does every channel contain 1, 2 and 3 ?
 
Quote from oddiduro:

Not really, there is a concept called each one teach one. You get back what you put out.

Give back to someone who will give back to others. Chicken is not that type of person.


I find it extrememly pathetic that you are helping chicken little in anyway after all the shit he posted challenging Jacks integrity.
 
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