Quote from IronFist:
Big Game Hunter,
What would your system do in a situation like this that I've circled, specifically the area highlighted by brackets?
Looks like there would be a lot of entry, loss, reentry in other direction, loss, reentry in initial direction, loss, over and over.
a) what happens here?
b) is your system truly ALWAYS in the market, or is there a filter against being in sometimes?
c) also in the choppy area on the middle/right, there are HHs during the down trends and LLs during the up trends. How would this do here?
Thanks.
You point out two principles.
Any ATS that is in all the time on right side of market Will have subroutines that deal with this.
Generically these scripts are referred to anti- whiplash.
The concept behind getting these additional profits is equivalent to buying the volatility.
The OP is using an inductive approach and therefore looks, as you see, what is happening that he thinks defines trending price movement. Should (IF) he switch to the null hypothesis instead, THEN he gets to add the volatility (bar heighth) to each trade.
The second principle is recognizing that "trending" has two characterisitcs and that non trending also has two characterisitcs. So the OP is only considering 1 of 4 time based possibilities for trading.
As you point out, he nets down by the losses incurred in the conditions of three out of four possibilities.
The analysis of his stated method came out two ways in one person's backtesting which was done once poorly and once otherwise.
In trend trading based on adjacency (and working from the null point of view), there are seven initial cases and only 2 are resolved with 2 bars. With respect to the null hypothesis cases of non trending there are 13 cases and, further, the outcomes may be used to deal with getting the profit represented by the individual bar volatility and injecting an anti-whipsaw profitability.
The OP observes that market to market, the inductive approach varies. This is a first order clue of how rash it is to work inductively.
Your first circled illustration focuses on the OB; the second deals with "chop" where traders whipsaw themselves for some of their reasons.