Quote from dbphoenix:
Pick any chart from the past, at random. Zoom out so far that you can't see anything useful or informative about any particular day, or, preferably, any particular week. When you open that particular chart, you'll have a starting point at the left edge and you'll have an ending point at the right edge. If it's a futures chart, these points may not coincide with the NY open and close. That doesn't matter. All you want is a starting point.
Now look at what's in front of you. Is price rising or falling? Where? How and where did it start? How far did it go? How much trouble did it have doing whatever it did? Are there any levels where it was turned repeatedly turned back, either to the upside or the downside? Might these be reliable S/R levels? And so on.
Now scroll forward, bar by bar, or let the replay function do it for you. How is price reacting to the context you're hypothesized? Is it respecting the S/R levels you hypothesized? Or is it ignoring them entirely and possibly creating new ones? Is it trending or ranging? If trending, what is the stride? If ranging, what are the limits? And so on.
Wash, rinse, repeat. Wash, rinse, repeat. Whether you replay ten days or twenty or thirty is up to you. You can replay an entire year in this way.
These "patterns", however, are consistent with any swing high or low, and unless the swing point is against support or resistance, the "pattern" may result in nothing more than sideways congestion, or it may actually be a retracement within a continuation which the trader will miss because he thought it was a reversal.
Naturally these patterns will "either work or not". But the more you focus on support and resistance and the balance between supply and demand when these "reversals" occur, the higher the probability that you will anticipate the direction of the resulting move and profit thereby. If support and resistance are not part of the equation, you're going to be doing an awful lot of stop-and-reverse.
It's been 3 weeks since I returned back to observation mode. A review is in order.
The focus of my observation was to see how price behaves around S/R and to build confidence in my ability to anticipate direction by reading the LOLR around these zones.
I am beginning to see the relationship between Supply/Demand and S/R. Changes in pressure occur all the time. But they count most when occurring at the extremes. This is because of either a move back from the extreme to the value zone or a move towards the creation of a new value zone. The link between AMT and Tape reading is clear and using them together is the best approach.
I will begin creating a trading plan from this basis of understanding.
There is much to learn - specifically, recognizing the interplay between price and volume at the boundary zones and it's effect on the LOLR.
