Quote from Shanb:
Hey Chris,
Have you been trading as of late? Ironically I am looking at some of the same things you are albeit I give them different names.
The way I have been viewing markets is either they are consolidating, Trending, or Reversing.
Notice when something is consolidating, price can be very random inside the range! You'll get chopped up trying to trade it unless you fade it at the extremes. I haven't found a great way of trading this so I don't. When I make bad trades it is almost always because I am trading in chop and getting chopped up lol!
In a trend pullbacks will happen to varying degrees. Shallow pullbacks will be bought and sold when a trend is fresh or very strong. Strong buying and or selling. As a move progresses, there will be deeper pullbacks and more profit-taking. Price will pullback enough to where selling pressure(up-trend) and buying pressure(down-trend) are exhausted and buyers or sellers come back in!
I've notice Volume is very important in this regard. Volume should decrease on a pullback. Also if a fast move happens and ends in a big volume blowoff there will generally not be any further move in that direction and bots/people chased price and now they are trapped and have to cover or sell out!
A Reversal will almost always coincide with a show of strength from the opposing side. A level or trendline will break...this time with volume increasing! If there is a test of the extreme on low volume...this can be a high probability setup for a reversal!
Shan,
Sounds like we've both been studying Al Brooks!
I'll take what you say and simplify it even further. I think the market only moves sideways and up/down. When it's moving up or down, it's trending, and the trend can show up in several variations. When price is moving sideways, it's either in a trading range (small or large) or in giant swings. Think reversals or continuations.
But I'm starting to see that it might be even simpler. I'm starting to see that price moves from level to level. When price is breaking through levels, it's trending. When price is getting stuck in levels, it's ranging/swinging.
To explain further, imagine a trend. Better yet, take the chart image of SPY that you attached. I've noticed trends tend to break out of current resistance, hit a new resistance zone, and then pull back to the old resistance that now acts as support. I edited the chart you uploaded to show what I mean. I've labeled the higher highs and higher lows. Each HH on the chart is a price level that could not be broken as evidenced by the large upper tails. They are false break-outs. Right after there is a pull-back that ends when price can not break below support. Look at the HL's I drew on the chart. The first HL is a strong down bar followed by consolidation in the form of an inside bar immediately after. The second HL shows two strong down bars (a bit deeper pull-back this time), and then the first up/green bar immediately after has a large lower tail, which is the false break-out past support. This means support held successfully, and now price will most likely trend upwards again. The third HL is a two-legged pull-back, and I believe Brooks mentions in his book that a 2-legged pull-back is common after three legs up, which is the case here.
The fourth HH and the last high, which are basically at the same price level, shows that the trend can't break through the latest resistance zone, signaling the end of the trend, and possibly a reversal.
Also notice that the first HH, which hit resistance, is the same level that the second HL could not break. It's the same for the second HH and the third HL as well as the third HH and the last HL.
Keep in mind, this is all just my opinion. Someone who actually trades professionally can feel free to call me out if I'm completely wrong.
BTW, I like what you're mentioning about volume as I have not used it at all up to this point. In an effort to keep things simple, I've taken volume off my charts. I figure I'm trading price, and direction is all I care about.
And to answer your question, I have not been trading at all over the past month or so. Instead, I was working on my trading plan and now I'm reading Al Brooks' book over and over while studying charts and trying to define and nail down a decent trend setup. It's all paid off so far, and if nothing else, I'm at least saving my money!
