Quote from abxs:
I also zoom out, check the 15 minutes chart and the weekly chart to see where greater S/R zones are situated.
Quote from abxs:
I appreciate the comments, and indeed I could use someone that takes this step by step with me, because I'm all figuring it out by myself and it's not working so well... I thought I understood the basics quite well actually... what do you suggest than? I've read all dbphoenix's threads and found them very interesting...
abxs,Quote from abxs:
Trouble interpreting price/volume/support/resistance
I'm trying very hard to understand the relationships that move the market. Based on essentials like support and resistance I try to determine a direction of the trend. Price is the main element I focus on, using volume to support my hypotheses.
Unfortunately it doesn't really seem to work out, I've been trying at this for a couple of months now and each time I think I got/see something and implement it after backtesting, it just doesn't seem to work.
Anybody who uses similar methodology and can give his or her opinion please? I'm trying to look at this from other perspectives but don't know what I'm missing or doing wrong here.
Attached you find a first chart where I noted my entry point.
Ah, trading philosophy from the Hallmark Card dept. That's what this thread really needs, not specific analyses of these charts in reply to your specific inquiries, but more pithy bromides, generalized and trite. "There are many paths to knowledge..."I hope you get the answers you are looking for. All council I can offer you is to work much harder and to find out for yourself. Among the few that know, nobody is going to offer "free tricks" that will make money for you.
hcour,Quote from hcour:
Ah, trading philosophy from the Hallmark Card dept. That's what this thread really needs, not specific analyses of these charts in reply to your specific inquiries, but more pithy bromides, generalized and trite. "There are many paths to knowledge..."
Nobody really "finds out for themselves". Nobody. Not Shakespeare, Mozart, or Einstein. Every student takes something from what has gone before, what has already been learned by others. That is education. There is nothing truly "new" in anything: art, business, sport, culture, science; it's all been done before many yrs ago. You may indeed take "it" someplace else, w/unique qualities, but this will always be built on that ever-evolving well-established knowledge-base. It is that previous knowledge that frees one to explore, because you need to know the rules before you can follow, stretch, or even break them. Where and how you get your information, and what you choose to regard or ignore, is up to you, that's just part of the process of learning.
H
