Quote from ProfitTakgFool:
The best way to view it is this....average and fade into a monster move, after you believe that move has ended.
Quote from ProfitTakgFool:
"Let's say you sold 1 contract on all of those tops for a total of 3 contracts and now your position is set and you believe we will correct down. It doesn't so you will have to stop out on all three of the contracts at a considerably high price."
>>>>Yes PTF I see your point. I think you and I are looking at the oppertunites in that section of market action differently.
>>>Regarding the 1st blue arrow, I'd be looking to short as price drifts down off that correction you had(wisely) just taken. The short went immeadiately into profit, and then put in a deepV lower at 12:00. I would have traded this short with a trailer and no way stay short after price has gone against me more than 50% of the profit that had just accrued. In other words I wouldn't hold on hoping to eventually the catch that deep/earlier big down trend (that may or may need still be intact) trend by averaging in at the 2nd blue arrow. That second blue arrow is telling me that the previous big down trend is probably adios...
>>>I have noticed that after a big move has exhausted (4th red arrow) and corrected (1st blue arrow)there are usually harmonics of that big move that ripple through for a brief time. Whether they are worth trading is debatable because they are not big moves.
"The best way to view it is this....average and fade into a monster move, after you believe that move has ended".
>>>Yes agreed this seems like the highest probablilty trade around. 3 challanges:
a)Timing the entry, as volatility is extreme at that point. But then, that's where your average-in/take-partials method comes in.
b)How far to ride it. Price could reverse on you fast as volatility is still extreme.
c)Somewhat rare. OK if one can watch and wait all day. Since I can not always watch all day I try to work these same ideas even on setups that are less extreme...
Quote from traderNik:
[...]
I truly believe that for anyone entering the intraday markets, an understanding of what you and f9 are talking about re: the conceptualizing price action in terms of the areas that the most action is occuring and then playing moves that stretch out to the tails of that distribution will go as far and probably further than looking at MACD, RSI, or any of the other canned indicators (which I have found to be of limited use).
Quote from Bitstream:
one indicator negligibly behind price is Bbands:
Quote from traderNik:
Not surprisingly, the only indicator I take trades from is a version of BBands called Aberration (at least something I devised which is based on Aberration).
However, gnome, in his long thread tonight answering questions, said that he uses stochastics, so there you go. It's not the tools, it's the workman, right?
Quote from Bitstream:
..... as seen in this ES chart among 6 or more buy signals just half may translate into profitable trades and the other half into losses. yet hardly any losses come from all sell signals that would potentially generate 5-6 profitable trades:
Quote from fearless9:
Bitstream,
This comes about because the longside behaviour or the ES is quite different to the shortside.
You need two distinct approaches as the "one size fits all" will lower your winning %
regards
f9