Quote from jasper6:
Thunderdog,
I started trading the ER2 when it was fairly new. I guess the main attraction was the daily range compared to other eminis. I gravitated to the constant range bars because it helped cut down on the noise. I found the volatility stop was helpful because it has a constant ATR and thus draws a very smooth curve. Something that can be looked at over a period of time.
I started off with minute charts, but it seems like the big moves were over before you had a chance to respond. They were just one big bar.
I have never done well with support and resistance. I don't know what to look for other than prior highs and lows. I've never seen floor pivots to be very accurate plus I could never tell whether to fade the pivot or not.
I can certainly see the attraction of that. I don't know what the ideal smoothness/texture trade-off is, but I doubt that either extreme is very helpful.Quote from jasper6:
...I gravitated to the constant range bars because it helped cut down on the noise. I found the volatility stop was helpful because it has a constant ATR and thus draws a very smooth curve. Something that can be looked at over a period of time.
If that is a problem, then have you considered sub-one-minute bars?Quote from jasper6:
...I started off with minute charts, but it seems like the big moves were over before you had a chance to respond. They were just one big bar.
I don't use S/R for entries or exits either, but I have found prior highs and lows to be useful.Quote from jasper6:
...I have never done well with support and resistance. I don't know what to look for other than prior highs and lows...
Quote from jasper6:
Buy1Sell2,
I have watched your swing trades with admiration in the ES Journal. Perhaps you could give me a synopsis of your general methodology or point me to the pages where it is listed.
Thanks
Quote from jasper6:
Well, there are close to 6000 pages in the ES Journal right now. I was just trying to narrow it down if that's OK with you.
That's not a bad suggestion, and I've made it to other traders myself.Quote from OldTrader:
You'd think if you're truly interested in some success, you would simply start reading through the journal. You got something else to do?
OldTrader
Quote from jasper6:
Well, there are close to 6000 pages in the ES Journal right now. I was just trying to narrow it down if that's OK with you.
Quote from MandelbrotSet:
That's not a bad suggestion, and I've made it to other traders myself.
But the truth is that knowledge is shared in the moment when something is happening ... that's when the point is made and it sticks home, for later retrieval, review and comparsion to situations when they arise again.
That's why the concept of reading through a dead journal, though valuable, is limited ... and that is also why most people won't share their hardone knowledge, because it was gained on the battlefield elbow-to-elbow with their compadres.
GL