Thanks and good conversationGlad to be of some help. When you look at the odds favor shorting near top of a range and going long near the bottom. I mean like 70% to 80% of BO’s will fail! That is good odds for fading. So fading the BO’s is a viable strategy. Of course, sooner or later a BO will succeed and if one happens to be in a fading position when it does succeed then one has to exit and look at going in the opposite direction of the fade.
Another technique that can be profitable in BROAD ranges. One can consider averaging into a losing position. I call it scaling into a losing position. Why do this? Well, If a trader got in too early say long in the lower 1/3 of a range and it heads south the odds favor a bounce off the bottom of the range and even if it breaks thru the bottom and becomes a BO ...WELL remember most BO’s fail. So, if the trader has been adding to his losing position the odds favor he will soon be back at a profit. Test it out on a LIVE SIM. Any scaling in must carry a limit on the max loss one will allow before exiting because when the technique does fail, losses can get big if not controlled.
Here is an example of range I was looking at today and traded. You can see me in short trade at the top of the range. The purple is the resistance zone and orange is the support. I wait til a range is somewhat clearly defined. I wait til top of resistance is tested in the zone, if it does not breakout, I short it.
One question is how do you decide your profit targets?
I use OCO bracket orders and I have just been using R:R =1 to get in and out. Or I identify some minor support within the range to get out.
One thing I am considering is using 2 contracts, and exit 1 contract at R:R = 1 or some minor support, and let the other contract run and just management.
For example, for the short the example. I will exit 1 contract at that profit target and manage the other contract for bigger profits.
So for this case, if I get stop out. Good, atleast I know price is going in opposite direction, and I just fade the BO.
The challenging part is identifying the range. But that is just practice.
