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Quote from Digs:
Do you agree ?
I draw all the major daily trendlines, with all major support and resistance levels from daily pivot points on the chart. This gives me the key price points where I expect the stock to either break or consolidate during intraday trading. Then its a matter of making a judgement if price is going to move to challenge the next key point or reverse back to previous key points. Of course some stocks show better reactions to these levels than others.
So why do people need stockastic, RSI, CCI etc, mathematical lagging tools to trade when price and key price levels is where the real battle if fought !
Do you agree ?
This may sound like I'm poking fun, but I'm not. When I read harrytrader's posts, I read them to myself with a "make-believe french accent doing a somewhat broken English", and, believe it or not, they are a bit more comprehensible that way. Maybe it makes me "hear" the intonation and inflection, and that makes up for the differences in grammar.Quote from lundy:
harrytrader,
i cant figure out what the hell your charts mean. Maybe you could dumb them down a little bit, VISUALLY. We're not all scientists here.
Quote from gms:
This may sound like I'm poking fun, but I'm not. When I read harrytrader's posts, I read them to myself with a "make-believe french accent doing a somewhat broken English", and, believe it or not, they are a bit more comprehensible that way. Maybe it makes me "hear" the intonation and inflection, and that makes up for the differences in grammar.

Quote from NihabaAshi:
There is no right or wrong...
no agree or disagreement.
If something works for you...don't assume the other guy/gal is not able to do the same via another method...
many different paths to profits.
My point is this...if you make...for example...50k per year via pivot points, trendlines and s/r levels...
another guy/gal makes 50k per year via Bollinger Bands and MACD...
who's correct...what exactly do you need an agreement about?
There are hundreds of different trade methodologies helping traders to succeed...
once you start thinking there is only one way to interpret the battle...
your missing the point.
P.S. I use pivot points, s/r levels, trendlines and they have no advantage over my use of Japanese Candlesticks, Bollinger Bands, MACD or whatever.
If you understand the weakness and strengths of your strategies...that's an edge.
Pivot points, s/r levels, trendlines, candlesticks, volume, bollinger bands, macd, stochastics or what ever...
all have their strengths and weakness.
Thus, if it works...keep using it.
NihabaAshi
Quote from gms:
This may sound like I'm poking fun, but I'm not. When I read harrytrader's posts, I read them to myself with a "make-believe french accent doing a somewhat broken English", and, believe it or not, they are a bit more comprehensible that way. Maybe it makes me "hear" the intonation and inflection, and that makes up for the differences in grammar.
Quote from Maverick1:
Nihaba,
I agree with the general thrust of your argument. However, I also think that you may have overlooked something...
What interests me ibeyond that is the ratio of successful traders in the differing camps. Let's assume for simplicity that there are only price action traders vs indicator traders.
Can you tell me what the ratio is going to be? Is it going to be 1 successful price trader for 1 successful indicator trader? Or maybe you'll find that for every 3 good indicator traders there is 1 good price trader. Granted 'good' here is vacuous, so assume that good means one who can make 50k a year with a given capital base.
What if for every successful indicator trader out there, there are 5 successful price traders?
I don't claim to have the answer. And this is a mystery that I would love to see solved. But it's probably never going to happen. Why would people tell you what their level of 'success' is anyways, were you to try and poll a sample that would be representative of the population?
Just putting that out there.
Maverick.