i can already see the responses now....... "GG, stop trying to make everything so complicated!"
anyway, i have to bring this up because the concept interests me. it's going to be hard to explain, but here's a theory i have...
sometimes i think that each instrument, on every time frame, has it's own average price movement, per time. for example, this can be applied to individual stocks on any time frame. i would argue each stock has it's own price "speed" relative to its timeframe. this can change, but it takes a big event to change it drastically...and usually the change takes place slowly.
my point is, things seem to have their own pace. they can go anywhere...up, down, sideways....it doesn't matter. but imo, they don't want to go too far, too fast, compared to how they moved in the past. if it moves too fast, people come in and see it's overbought/oversold for the time and send it back to it's mean price. gaps are a good example. look how many times a stock seems to gap for no reason and gets filled. the move was probably too fast for time and traders come in and fade the move until it is back to what they consider normal.
just like there is a different average true range for every stock and it changes depending on the timeframe. i would say there is an average extreme range. price does not want to go x distance away from its mean price before y time.
maybe this is what gann meant when he talked about price and TIME. trouble is, i'm no gann expert, so i can't say. even if i'm on to something, i still don't know how to use my idea really....
anyway, i have to bring this up because the concept interests me. it's going to be hard to explain, but here's a theory i have...
sometimes i think that each instrument, on every time frame, has it's own average price movement, per time. for example, this can be applied to individual stocks on any time frame. i would argue each stock has it's own price "speed" relative to its timeframe. this can change, but it takes a big event to change it drastically...and usually the change takes place slowly.
my point is, things seem to have their own pace. they can go anywhere...up, down, sideways....it doesn't matter. but imo, they don't want to go too far, too fast, compared to how they moved in the past. if it moves too fast, people come in and see it's overbought/oversold for the time and send it back to it's mean price. gaps are a good example. look how many times a stock seems to gap for no reason and gets filled. the move was probably too fast for time and traders come in and fade the move until it is back to what they consider normal.
just like there is a different average true range for every stock and it changes depending on the timeframe. i would say there is an average extreme range. price does not want to go x distance away from its mean price before y time.
maybe this is what gann meant when he talked about price and TIME. trouble is, i'm no gann expert, so i can't say. even if i'm on to something, i still don't know how to use my idea really....
just call me gordon einstein.