Quote from athlonmank8:
Explain your strategy for doing that..............You sounds like you're better than the market. Ok sounds good. Time to back it up.
What's your strategy for trading "market context"????
Who are you kidding?

Quote from iplay1515:
The pattern that I have noticed using the alternate T/A definition is when the proper shaped wedge pattern is in place, a noticeable up-trend will follow.
Quote from traderum:
Folks, forget T/A since prices are made by the Market Maker (MM) arbitrarily to fit his own case.
Remember that guy is there to provide, in theory, liquidity.
As a reward for this "service to the mankind" he is allowed to make profits of his own.
Some MMs have taken this literally and it doesn't bother them to let the price fall 30%, 40% or even more than 50%
to maximize their profits as much as possible.
One can say MMs are greedy thieves who want to legally rob you,
some call them even "blood suckers".
For example: if you buy long a stock or option the MM will let the price fall,
just to panic you, so that you close with a loss. It's a psychological game.
That means, the price is determined by the MM only, not by support&demand by the crowd.
Think about it, and forget all the T/A crap.
(yes, I belonged to that camp too, long ago)
Quote from Fibbin-Archie:
Big Money DOES NOT automatically equate to Smart Money...
As a caveat to my previous post, that's usually following an initial false break of the horizontal reaction level of the ascending/descending triangle... and that ain't in the classic TA text books...
Quote from Weakhand:
what testing has been done to quantify this hypothesis. In fact are there even testable parameters?
Weaky
Quote from Fibbin-Archie:
Put in a bit of chart time...
I make it sound simple I know, it's not really that simple, but it comes with experience which means sitting in front of a screen and studying price action for hundreds, if not thousands of hours...
Quote from Zen Student:
Empty your cup.
Nan-in, a Japanese master during the Meiji era (1868-1912), received a university professor who came to inquire about Zen.
Nan-in served tea. He poured his visitor's cup full, and then kept on pouring.
The professor watched the overflow until he no longer could restrain himself. "It is overfull. No more will go in!"
"Like this cup," Nan-in said, "you are full of your own opinions and speculations. How can I show you Zen unless you first empty your cup?"
