Hey Grob,
have enjoyed reading posts by you in different threads. Being a newbie I don´t understand more than half of what you say, but it has given me a lot of new thoughts on different topics, wich I find very valuable. I´m not so focused on who is right and who is wrong, I just wanna learn to look at the market from different angles.
Anyway, seems to me like it´s your mission to answer questions here on ET so I thought you might be the right person to go to with some difficulties I´m facing:
1. I´ve been looking at volume spikes til my eyes bleeded the last two days. It became obvious to me that there´s a high probability that a spike signals either a upcoming reversal or a congestion area (hope it´s the right term, being a swede i´m not sure, what I mean is price moving sideways for a while or a small temporary pullback), people taking profits before the price continues to move.
My question is - is there some concrete information to look for to determine (or higher the probability) whether the spike is an early reversal signal or just a sign that the trend will take a temporary pause? I mean something that you can see almost everytime in this kind of situations. I don´t find indicators to be that reliable for this purpose.
2. When using trendlines to get a clear picture of shortterm trends, which timeframe do you recommend? Which frame do you find most reliable?
3. I find closing a position at the right level to be even more difficult than to enter at the right level. If price hits a r/s-level that you can see on the chart, or if it hit pivot levels or a area that has attracted high volume earlier, than it may not be so difficult. Problem is I seldom reach this levels, i´m chickening out too early. Reason is I can´t see the difference between a temporary pullback and a reversal. To sum it up - I can´t identify if a move is really out of fuel or not. Any suggestions what to look for and how to act?
4. Continuing to look at the relationship between dji and mini-dow I´ve ended up in the middle between your believe and my former idé. I see a close range between the two as a sign of insecurity. Seems to me that they are close when the market is directionless, moving sideways or jumping, and that a breakout can go either up or down from there. Seems like there´s a 50/50 chance either way. Am I missing something?
I would be very glad to hear your views on these subjects, if you have the time and motivation. PLEASE answer as simple and concreate as possible. Feel free to think of me as a monkey that you´re trying to learn how to fly a concorde if it helps you to simplify things.
Thanks in advance!
Friday, time to leave the table
/Stalker
have enjoyed reading posts by you in different threads. Being a newbie I don´t understand more than half of what you say, but it has given me a lot of new thoughts on different topics, wich I find very valuable. I´m not so focused on who is right and who is wrong, I just wanna learn to look at the market from different angles.
Anyway, seems to me like it´s your mission to answer questions here on ET so I thought you might be the right person to go to with some difficulties I´m facing:
1. I´ve been looking at volume spikes til my eyes bleeded the last two days. It became obvious to me that there´s a high probability that a spike signals either a upcoming reversal or a congestion area (hope it´s the right term, being a swede i´m not sure, what I mean is price moving sideways for a while or a small temporary pullback), people taking profits before the price continues to move.
My question is - is there some concrete information to look for to determine (or higher the probability) whether the spike is an early reversal signal or just a sign that the trend will take a temporary pause? I mean something that you can see almost everytime in this kind of situations. I don´t find indicators to be that reliable for this purpose.
2. When using trendlines to get a clear picture of shortterm trends, which timeframe do you recommend? Which frame do you find most reliable?
3. I find closing a position at the right level to be even more difficult than to enter at the right level. If price hits a r/s-level that you can see on the chart, or if it hit pivot levels or a area that has attracted high volume earlier, than it may not be so difficult. Problem is I seldom reach this levels, i´m chickening out too early. Reason is I can´t see the difference between a temporary pullback and a reversal. To sum it up - I can´t identify if a move is really out of fuel or not. Any suggestions what to look for and how to act?
4. Continuing to look at the relationship between dji and mini-dow I´ve ended up in the middle between your believe and my former idé. I see a close range between the two as a sign of insecurity. Seems to me that they are close when the market is directionless, moving sideways or jumping, and that a breakout can go either up or down from there. Seems like there´s a 50/50 chance either way. Am I missing something?
I would be very glad to hear your views on these subjects, if you have the time and motivation. PLEASE answer as simple and concreate as possible. Feel free to think of me as a monkey that you´re trying to learn how to fly a concorde if it helps you to simplify things.
Thanks in advance!
Friday, time to leave the table
/Stalker