Turning point chart.

Thanks.

Agree that a checklist will help.


If you mean short term long position and longer term short position then I agree.

I shorted at 7383 and exited at 7245 so I was looking for a short term bump at 7228 before continuation of downtrend.

I wasn't awake to trade it but I got a small reaction to 7228.I think I would have been looking for a bit more.

Update chart:

View attachment 320135

i got a buy fill at 7232.1 contract.

i'll let you know it goes.
 
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Thanks.

Agree that a checklist will help.


If you mean short term long position and longer term short position then I agree.

I shorted at 7383 and exited at 7245 so I was looking for a short term bump at 7228 before continuation of downtrend.

I wasn't awake to trade it but I got a small reaction to 7228.I think I would have been looking for a bit more.

I didn’t mean any short or long position, it was the other poster @triplicity that was suggesting potential trades. :D

I apologize if my original post was too verbose, and I’m in chronic pain, on strong meds, plus English is my 2nd language. The main gist in my post was not about direction, but rather about being careful with focusing on just a line or just a pattern, and to rather first focus on trying to build a comprehensive “price story” based on your own personal, but consistent objective analysis.

The reason behind checklist is that PA trading can be very subjective, and therefore you need to have some consistent “clarity”, because discipline is critical in PA trading, and discipline starts with clarity of knowing exactly what you should be doing and when.

To become a good PA trader you need to have trust in your analysis, which I feel is very difficult without a clarity and consistency. Without clarity and consistency, people become anxious not so much for emotional reasons, but rather because they don’t fully trust in their PA skills.

Regarding the short-term trade (bounce) against the trend, I don’t think I should comment because I have no idea what your trading style is, and therefore me and everyone else will see things differently.

However, I think there are much better trades available in the market than the quick bounce that you’ve missed when you were asleep.

If you want to experiment with bounces off levels, then perhaps you can check out the FX markets during the late US session when thing are quietening down, AND when the daily ATR is extended (NOT during the European session). But with equities, the bounces off levels don’t work as well.

But I think you’re on the right track, just few tweaks and structured approach should help you with clarity and consistence.
 
I didn’t mean any short or long position, it was the other poster @triplicity that was suggesting potential trades. :D

I apologize if my original post was too verbose, and I’m in chronic pain, on strong meds, plus English is my 2nd language. The main gist in my post was not about direction, but rather about being careful with focusing on just a line or just a pattern, and to rather first focus on trying to build a comprehensive “price story” based on your own personal, but consistent objective analysis.

The reason behind checklist is that PA trading can be very subjective, and therefore you need to have some consistent “clarity”, because discipline is critical in PA trading, and discipline starts with clarity of knowing exactly what you should be doing and when.

To become a good PA trader you need to have trust in your analysis, which I feel is very difficult without a clarity and consistency. Without clarity and consistency, people become anxious not so much for emotional reasons, but rather because they don’t fully trust in their PA skills.

Regarding the short-term trade (bounce) against the trend, I don’t think I should comment because I have no idea what your trading style is, and therefore me and everyone else will see things differently.

However, I think there are much better trades available in the market than the quick bounce that you’ve missed when you were asleep.

If you want to experiment with bounces off levels, then perhaps you can check out the FX markets during the late US session when thing are quietening down, AND when the daily ATR is extended (NOT during the European session). But with equities, the bounces off levels don’t work as well.

But I think you’re on the right track, just few tweaks and structured approach should help you with clarity and consistence.

Thanks and great post.

The idea of building a price story is very helpful.

Cheers,
 
@ semperfrosty putting aside that it would be against the flow of the market as already suggested by others, the level you draw as a thin line on H1 seems to me to be located inside a wide flip zone that can be seen on higher timeframes (see my H6 chart).

Therefore, relying on a thin line on H1 as a refernce point is in my opinion little bit of a wishful thinking, especially if the overall chart pattern looks weak.

Yes, prices have penetrated the flip zone onhigher timeframe number of times, but nevertheless it does seem to continue to have some flipping validity, which is suggesting that there are some market participants getting trapped in that area.

If you want to be a successful PA trader, then I’d recommend that you always check the surrounding timeframes, especially the higher ones so you can build your own “PA story”, otherwise what happens is that we end up judging the whole “movie” on just one or two snapshots, and lots of important information is then not even being considered.

While there is nothing wrong with trading off just one timeframe, it just doesn’t seem to be the most efficient way of analysing PA.

Obviously there needs to also be some signs that buyers are beginning to overbalance the sellers in that area, otherwise you’ll be just catching falling knives.

There is nothing wrong with trading just off levels without any confirmation, I do it all the time, but that seems to work much better on mean reverting markets such as in FX, but not against the trend in equities.

I think you’re on the right track with the general concept, but it might need some tweaking and perhaps putting together a checklist of certain criteria that you need to objectively see on the chart before even considering trade, otherwise PA will lead you down a rabbit hole.

You need to counterbalance a subjective PA with very some kind of a very objective framework (e.g using checklists), otherwise you might find yourself getting sucked into crappy trade, as the market is “advertising” all the time, and lots of PA traders fail because they’re unable to create an objective framework to counterbalance the subjectivity of PA trading

View attachment 320107
This looks very interesting...
Did you figure out a way to know if price will return after the breaks?
 
This looks very interesting...
Did you figure out a way to know if price will return after the breaks?


I’m not sure what you specifically mean.

Either way, I never know anything about what the price will do next, it’s just that sometimes one scenario is more probable than another possible scenarios.

If you mean price breaking some key level, then sometimes that can be followed by immediate retest of the level (applies more to FX), or there can a be “normal re-test of the level, or there can be just a pullback without retesting the broken level at all, or the price can just fall/rise even without providing an opportunity to hop onto the momentum/trend.

Is there a way to figure out if the price will return? Nobody ever knows, however there are often clues such: is there nearby some supply /demand on the left side of the chart?, or how much the price was contracted and for how long before it broke the level (contracted volatility reverting to the mean), or how well defined the level was and it’s visibility on multiple timeframes . . . and few other things like that sometimes can give some clues of how, when, and where to the price is more likely to go.

Basically what I mean is not to just focus on the pattern or level itself, but building a “price story” on what is happening around the pattern and around on other timeframes, and trying to figure out where clusters of orders are most likely going to be stacked, and basically try to see through the chart as through an X-ray in order to “discover” where the order flow is most likely going to be triggered from.
 
Thank you; ... a lot of knowledge there...!

I just happen to notice the zone from your chart (mostly people post S&R lines)
Price kept coming back, so...

If you're talking about clusters, do you mean around H's & L's?
 
Thank you; ... a lot of knowledge there...!

I just happen to notice the zone from your chart (mostly people post S&R lines)
Price kept coming back, so...

If you're talking about clusters, do you mean around H's & L's?


Not really, although sometimes that can be the case at Highs and Lows because that’s where most retail traders put their stops, but more often you’ll find stacked clusters of orders near horizontal levels, and not so much around swing Hs/Ls

The clusters of order flow are usually in areas where the Buy-Stops of breakout traders' will be triggered and where the SL orders of those who were shorting will be triggerd simultaneously, and that creates a "breakout rush. (reverse for sells).

The zones I draw are Supply/Demand zones, which is not the same concept as S/R. The explanation is beyond the scope of a short post, especially given my English is very verbose.:D
 
Hi everyone,

Looking for interpretations of the below chart.

I havent found RSI,STOCH or MACD useful in the past.

The blue line just below market is the level I am interested in buying.

My current thinking,i would actually need price to pass through the blue line and i would maintain a buy above it.

In anyones opinion/interpretation,do the indicators suggest strength at that level?

View attachment 320086
%%
a] Assume its some trend I trade or invest in
b] Assume I dont use all your lowest indicators,MACD.... + you are right o assume that LOL.
c] Figure I like the long term trend, medium trend??
d] Figure its above 50day ma??
E] IF seasonals were favorable , could get in early.
My current thinking is [US]SPY benchmark is down AUG month to date;
so rather than buy early \take some profits off inverse[about the same as short profits]
On a real strong trend , an early buy can work well....:D:D
 
Not really, although sometimes that can be the case at Highs and Lows because that’s where most retail traders put their stops, but more often you’ll find stacked clusters of orders near horizontal levels, and not so much around swing Hs/Ls

The clusters of order flow are usually in areas where the Buy-Stops of breakout traders' will be triggered and where the SL orders of those who were shorting will be triggerd simultaneously, and that creates a "breakout rush. (reverse for sells).

The zones I draw are Supply/Demand zones, which is not the same concept as S/R. The explanation is beyond the scope of a short post, especially given my English is very verbose.:D
I would love to hear more, but I can't PM you and I don't like to highjack the thread...;)
 
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