mega dump. WFT is going on anyway?
Price is returning to the mean of its trend, or at least in that direction:
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showpost.php?p=3948599&postcount=340
mega dump. WFT is going on anyway?
The move itself doesn't really tell you anything that you can use to help make a good trading decision
Being its the weekend I can afford a modicum of attitude
This sentence/ line of thinking is bullshit
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For the record; I rescinded my offer to break the chart / move down for FP
Call it gut instinct
RN
It's simple. There was no liquidity in that area. Why is there no liquidity there? Now that is the question.I am curious about what is going on behind a spike. I am not sure if this is a behavioral question since I am studying price action, or if this is a technical question.
My attached image shows a 30 second chart on the left, and a tick chart on the right. I am curious as to why price drops like this so quickly. I would imagine that there are buyers at every tick on the way down, at least it so appears on the DOM (not that I am really watching this, I just find it nice for order entry). Since trading is about supply and demand, when price doesn't go higher, it is because there are no more buyers willing to pay the higher price, and the price has to drop to a lower level where a buyer would want to buy. Why are so many levels skipped in an instant when it appears there are people waiting at every level?
In the image, it appears that price hit 3720.50, and then dropped 3 whole points in perhaps just a couple of ticks. I am not sure if that steep diagonal line on the way down in the tick chart is just the line going to the next tick 3 points away or if perhaps some trades were done on the way down. But I would still think that given the volume of NQ, there should be many more trades on the way down.. no?
Update: Just before posting this, I decided to increase the spacing on that tick chart and it does appear that the diagonal line down does stop at every tick on the way down (2nd attachment). So does this mean that when price hit the highest point, there just weren't any more buyers, and what buyers there were on the way down was not enough to keep the price from dropping 12 whole ticks in a matter of seconds? It turns out this initial drop of 3 points took 7 seconds.
Thanks for reading.
Agreed. The "smart money" thing is pretty much a con that's been sold to beginners for at least a decade. "

Agreed. The "smart money" thing is pretty much a con that's been sold to beginners for at least a decade. "Big", yes. "Smart", not so much.
Incidentally, a tick chart should not be drawn as a line chart. Otherwise one is sort of missing the point. No pun intended.
I'm trying to get my head right and understand what the danger of the concept of "smart money" is? Wyckoff spoke of the "composite operator" which to my mind seems like the same concept. Am I missing something?
But the idea that all the big firms get together on some sort of conference call and plot out their strategies together is ludicrous.
Agreed. I'm not a VSA guy and don't how they use the SM term but I clearly should use big instead.