Quote from Gringo:
I am assuming if Niko took the earlier short off the LH then he'd be exiting here as shown in this chart. There are other versions based on one's plan where one actually is not even getting in on that lower high because there was no shorter RET to the upside. There wasn't even an SL break of that down move hence not even giving an opportunity to enter a short. I can see how Niko's short isn't bad, and I could have taken it as well but would have preferred a shorter RET to make life a bit easier.
If one is not worried about the LL then in an alternate world where the short hasn't been initiated, as is the case here, a long could be taken by the bold where the short is exited in this chart.
![]()
Gringo
Quote from dbphoenix:
Sorry, but I don't know what you're referring to. The lower high is the first retracement after the break of the demand line, therefore a short. After this is taken, a supply line can be drawn, a lower low is made, and the supply line is broken offering an opportunity for a long where he stated.
Quote from Gringo:
Edit2: Where is the short exiting? Isn't the short exiting first and then going long or exit and reversal of short is handled at the same location?
Quote from bmwhendrix:
Shorting at less than 50% ret? I am obviously missing something on the 50% retracement.
From a few pages back:
"Here, for example, price failed to make a higher high. What does one do with that?If trading multiple contracts take one off when it failed at the last swing low and look for a retracement to get long but do not thin k about a short until the 50% line is taken out!"
or was this the mis-post attributed in error to DB?