Tuesdayâs Blog Results: The suggested short at 4623.50 stopped out.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Anticipation
Plenty of time in trading is spent waiting. Waiting for a setup, waiting for an economic release, waiting for a profit target. Lots of waiting.
Hereâs how to make this âdowntimeâ productive: Practice anticipation. Get in the habit of asking âWhat ifâŚ?â questions. Answer them. In doing so youâll be making decisions in advance and be able to act on the spot. No wondering, guessing, procrastinating or flat-out missing the trade. Youâve committed with foresight.
Here's a simple example: Price is slowly moving sideways. Your entry price to buy is far enough away that you donât expect to see it trigger soon. Suddenly price plunges. The speed candle down is looking powerful.
Now is the time to anticipate. Why is this happening? What catalyst occurred? Will it continue or reverse? What are the likely outcomes?
What CAN happen to price?
Mondayâs Blog Results: The suggested buy at 4527 stopped out.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Asymmetry
In its simplest form trading is nothing more than risking money to make money. You need to be a net winner. This will happen if your losses are kept âsmallâ (thatâs a relative word) and you haveâŚ
Successful traders look for asymmetrical trades. These are trades where the risk is very small compared to the potential gains.
One application for asymmetry is frequently overlooked. Trade direction. Evidence shows that price tends to fall faster than it rises. Look at enough charts, measure the moves, youâll find itâs true most of the time. Tops tend to be âroundâ, bottoms tend to be âVâ shaped.
Given this reality, shouldnât your exit rules for shorting be different than for going long?
Doesnât it make sense to take quicker profit on plunges in price and give the melt-up time?
Itâs rare for a trading strategy to be symmetrica...
Fridayâs Blog Results: The suggested buy at 4616.50 stopped out. The suggested short at 4658 missed filling a great runner by 1 point. âš
Todayâs Trading Tip: Breaking a bad streak.
If you missed our weekly trade review session, LookBack (5), the recording is up here. After 14 winning weeks our strategies hit the inevitable losing week.
Hereâs what we know from our documentation and 9500-trade database: Losing streaks become winning streaks. And vice-versa. Thereâs even some math about this phenomenon called Theory of Runs.
The chart above shows every high-volume level that was likely to be touched in last nightâs Globex session. After last weekâs losses, right when you might be wondering if you should quit, the tables turn and you have 7 winners in a row. Obviously, it takes confidence to persist when losing. That confidence comes from your experience and the evidence you have.
If youâre wondering about the rules followed to get those 7 winners, join us in our next LookBack (5) se...
Thursdayâs Blog Results: The suggested buy at 4715.25 offered a modest 8-point run. The short breakout afterward stopped out.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Taking profit. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
If your day-trading strategy has edge then you wonât see many trades go against you to stop out immediately. Of course, youâll have plenty of stops triggered, but most will show some open profit before stopping out or moving on to your target(s). This is the nature of trading small time frames intraday. Price can be ânoisy.â
Every asset will differ, but you can and should find their price movements that recur over and over. This data will give you better profit targets.
Hereâs an example based on the S&P futures trading a Volume Profile strategy with 9,508 trades logged. Price will FILL a 2-point target 62% of the time (meaning it moved at least 2.25 points to guarantee execution). Price will FILL a 4-point target 38% of the time and a 6-point target 25% of the time.
Now you know with hard evidence that if youâre ...
Wednesdayâs Blog Results: Both suggested levels stopped out. The Team here had a tough couple of days in both strategies. âš
Todayâs Trading Tip: Handling losses. Â Â Â
Losing should not affect you financially or psychologically. Youâve determined how much you can lose before you react emotionally, and youâre disciplined to limit your loss to that number on every trade.
But what if you do get anxious or upset? Hereâs a quick checklist you can use when that happens:
Stop when your answer is ânoâ and fix the problem. That may be easier said than done but until you do moving on through the checklist is ineffective.
If you get to the end and youâve lost confidence in your strategy itâs time to move on. Start exploring new strategies. Conversely, i...
Tuesdayâs Blog Results: The suggested long entry at 4633.25 ran for 18.75 points. The short never triggered.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Reversals or breakouts? Â Â Â Â Â Â
Both. The high-volume price levels formed by the accumulation and distribution of large positions are simply at âfair value.â Think about it this way: there was a buyer and seller for every contract traded. This means they AGREED the price was fair.
Once price strays OUT of the fair value level it becomes attractive to a trader who is either bullish or bearish. This allows you to trade both reversals and breakouts around the volume levels. Looking at the chart above youâll see that price went up and through the prior dayâs fair value level offering you the opportunity to buy the breakout, as was suggested.
Keep in mind as you follow the performance of the Blog levels every day they are both reversal and breakout setups. If you want to see ALL the levels every day, join our team. Click here.
Todayâs Best S&P Futures Turning...
Mondayâs Blog Results: The suggested long entry only bounced for a 3.50-point scalp. The Team saw two more like that, all three trades breaking even.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Breakeven is a win. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Yesterday you read about alternative exit strategies and how in current market conditions our ârapid stop movementâ is working best.
Itâs a simple risk-averse ruleset designed for day traders only. Enter a minimum of 3 contracts. At profit target 1 move the stop on the remaining contracts to breakeven âfor the trade.â This means youâll be giving back that initial profit. At profit target 2 move the stop to breakeven for the remaining contracts. This means youâve guaranteed a small winning trade. As the trade runs move the stop to pivots on the chart.
Downside: Youâll miss some big moves in your direction if price is choppy around your entry. Youâll have plenty of breakeven events. Hindsight will tease you into greediness and youâll abandon the strategy.
Upside: Youâll miss many s...
Fridayâs Blog Results: The suggested long entry never triggered. The short did fill but too late to enter minutes before the close. Team Members had a tough day with Volume Profile but made most it back with Volatility Reversal. Diversification of trading strategies helps.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Your trade plan is alive. Â
In your trading plan youâve established a set of rules that when followed, show a positive outcome. You have edge.
Most trade plans start simple. When to enter and exit. Which asset to trade. Which tools to use. How much to risk.
Thatâs a good start but the real meaty rules come from live trading experience. We canât possibly consider all outcomes and influences in the beginning. We need to trade live, observe, document, and mine the data for new rules to improve. This means your trading plan is a living document. It should evolve.
Add to all that the fact that markets change character. This means you will eventually experience enough change to add conditional rul...
Thursdayâs Blog Results: Price chopped sideways between volume levels with no trades triggering.
Todayâs Trading Tip: Know the weather report.
The âweatherâ in this case is the condition of the market youâre trading.
Yesterday was slow for the S&P using Volume Profile. Other days there can be a dozen or more triggers. We canât always predict the future, but we can frequently come close. Knowing whether the day will likely be wide or narrow range is very useful.
Hereâs why: If youâre looking for a big move and the âforecastâ is for a narrow day youâd be better off taking quicker profits. Conversely, if youâre in a trade that has room to run and the âforecastâ is for a wide day youâll have the confidence to let it run.
Here's two tools that will help you forecast the âweather:â
Wednesdayâs Blog Results: Price chopped sideways in a 30-point range with no respect for the volume levels. Both the long and short suggestions stopped out. The Globex did shine once again for Team Members with a great 20-point short (see chart).
Todayâs Trading Tip: Team trader or lone wolf?
Which is better? This is one of those worthless debates. Both have their advantages and disadvantages. It boils down to your decision on which has advantages that outweigh disadvantages.
Wall Street may disagree, but I would say do both. Put some balance in your trading life. Devote an hour or two a day to collaborating and trading live with smart and successful traders. It will enhance your knowledge, skills, and ultimate performance.
Hereâs just one real world example: Several months ago, a member of our team suggested a trading strategy ruleset he recently learned. The logic sounded fine. We coded the rules and through a combination of back and forward testing found it had some edge. Taking...
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