Quote from EstebanUno:
But even on the TLs, what tends to happen is that the Dom signal was a correct indication, but before it pans out it will bounce off my wall like I hoped, but then the wall will break down on the next attempt a minute or so later. Ultimately price will reverse like expected in the same ballpark area, but one or more whipsaws later.
Esteban
When it reverses later, is it against another wall? I've been finding the disappearance of significant DOM walls very useful, at least for about a point of movement. When a wall stays in place at a RTL I go more by how forcefully price tests the wall than the presence of the wall itself as a signal of whether it is likely to hold.
I had some good examples noted on yesterday's chart, but I just opened QuoteTracker and it has eaten all of my lines and notes, so I have nothing to post....
I look forward to them.