Steve, I am not much interested in you defending your results, but I am interested in examining the basis of your approach. I posted two messages on Sept. 19 to which you have not responded.
Please review them for detail, but in essence they are:
Your method was developed long before daytrading achieved its current popularity. How have you adapted your approach to respond to this?
Why is it better to define the trading range limits as the high and low in place at the time of one float turnover, rather than on the basis of the support and resistance that naturally defines a trading range without regard to float?
Please review them for detail, but in essence they are:
Your method was developed long before daytrading achieved its current popularity. How have you adapted your approach to respond to this?
Why is it better to define the trading range limits as the high and low in place at the time of one float turnover, rather than on the basis of the support and resistance that naturally defines a trading range without regard to float?
