Quote from FB123:
Well in my case I trade crude, so no - there is absolutely no way to trade tick by tick on that instrument. I never use the DOM, just a very short-range chart.
Here is a quote from another thread on my method. It's probably the hardest thing to do in the markets, and I don't always do it. I usually do wait at least 30 seconds to 1 minute after the release for it to give SOME indication of where it's going.
http://elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&postid=2554697#post2554697
In order to analyze news, you have to analyze it in the context of market action. The big players already knew what the news was. They created a big run up so that people would notice. Then the "good" news comes out, and all the clueless newbies jump in. They think: "The market has gone higher, and now there's good news that came out. Aha! So THAT'S why it went higher! I was holding off before because I didn't know why it was running up - but I'd better jump in now that I'm sure things are good, because now it's got to keep going for sure!"
The average person is clueless. They really don't think much further than good news = higher, bad news = lower, and this thought process is reinforced in them every day by the lies spun to them in the mainstream media about what's really driving the market. That's why they're called sheep. The players set the sheep up, set their sell orders up top, and unloaded as the dummies were buying. Then they created a rout, as all the weak hands sold out in a panic. ("What's going on??!?! I don't understand??!?! How can the market be dropping like this when the news is good?? It must be a mistake! I KNOW the news is good, who are these dummies that are selling? I know, I'll just buy more at these cheap prices since I know that things are fundamentally good now! Oh crap! It's still going down!!! AAAAAAGGHHGH! What the HELL!!!! How long can this damn thing fall!?!?!?! Holy Crap! This is too much!!! SELL SELL SELL SELL SELL SELL!!!"
Usually that's right about when the bottom comes.
That's how the clueless people are liberated from their money. So when you see good news come out and market stalls (especially after a rise), or you see bad news come out and market just sits there and churns huge volume but doesn't drop very far, it means that the big players are reversing their positions and using the news to get the sheep in on the wrong side of the trade. This is easier to spot at a bottom than a top, usually. Bottoms form in an incredible panic, tops generally have a distribution phase that lasts a bit longer and is a bit harder to spot. Incidentally, they have been doing this for a couple of weeks. The market has been churning in a range for a number of trading days after a rise of 2 months. That's a sign of distribution. There were also divergences forming with other markets that had to make you cautious to the downside.
Right before any big drop you will probably get a quick final rise, and right before any big rise you will generally get a quick final drop to shake out the weak hands and get them going the wrong way.
How do you objectively determine what is bad news and good news? And how do you determine whether market is legitimately rising or doing a quick run to the upside before going down?
"Right before any big drop you will probably get a quick final rise, and right before any big rise you will generally get a quick final drop to shake out the weak hands and get them going the wrong way."
So if the market goes up, it might be the precursor to a downmove, and if the market goes down it can be the precursor to the upmove, all the while you have to keep in mind whether the news is positive or negative and when it goes down on good news it means the big players are selling, which means you could have a quick run to the upside, and vice versa.
This is why I don't trade the news, I rather trade pure TA and avoid having positions or tighten stop during news, than trade this mess. I am no fan of these trade methods that sound so vague, like gap fills and such.
I understand you can't be too precise FB123, but news trading like you're doing sounds so complicated.
