Trading Chaos by Bill Williams

osho67

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Has anyone read the book Trading Chaos by Bill Williams and successfully tried out the methods he describes?

Looks very interesting, I haven't finished the book yet but I think it involves Elliot wave BUT with a precise way of knowing which wave you are in, overall the book is saying you can accurately read the market once you understand the underlying structure

It also says that with his approach you can in ten seconds or less analyze any market and decide whether you should be long, short, pyramiding, stropping and reversing or just out.
Any thoughts or comments ?
 
I have skimmed his work and place it in the way low end of just good. Williams may be able to trade like a big dog but his explanations of it are full of it. Not judging him for that - George Soros is unable to fully explain how he does what he does either. However, whether for exploitation or through misunderstanding, Williams is piggybacking on / misusing two words - chaos and fractal. That sends my trust index spiralling down...

hth

zd
 
Hi ZDO

I've just started the chapter on Elliot waves, but overall do you think his explanation of precisely identifying which wave you are in is correct or achievable when trading real time ?
 
I've read this book and I believe there is some good to be learnt, but as a complete trading methodology, it's a little too thin on the ground. For example, his trend reversal indicator to open a position is barely explained and is, in my opinion, a very unreliable signal for entering trades.

Another of his books, New Trading Dimensions, however, provides much more value. There is much which is in Trading Chaos, but in tems of context and providing a more robust trading style it is a much-improved read. For example, I like (and use) his concept of spotting quiet, non-trending markets, getting on the right side of these moves once the price has moved in one direction and then adding to that position. His exit strategies, though, again are not really given the attention I think that they deserve. He gives about 8 chapters to opening trades, and only one for closing a position.

Another criticism I feel is justified for both books is his using graphs which all-too-nicely fit his assertions, i.e. nice trending indices of the late nineties. Any trite indicator would've told you you should have been long!!!

Anyhow, good luck with it......
 
to bill or not to bill

One thing's for sure his expert on metastock is totally useless. :(

He must be a better trader than teacher :|
 
ZDO said:
I have skimmed his work and place it in the way low end of just good. Williams may be able to trade like a big dog but his explanations of it are full of it. Not judging him for that - George Soros is unable to fully explain how he does what he does either. However, whether for exploitation or through misunderstanding, Williams is piggybacking on / misusing two words - chaos and fractal. That sends my trust index spiralling down...

hth

zd
A riddle isn't it ZDO ?

Put your attention on these things more deliberately and the realisation you may derive will startle you, but then on the other hand all of it is obvious, is it not ?
 
Hello,

For those who have read the book, it says MACD crosses below zero indicates end of wave 4 (my assumption) , then it says wait until MACD crosses below zero before putting a trade on for wave 5 (p128) but hasn't MACD already crossed zero?
Is it correct to say than when MACD crosses below zero, this is the end of wave 4?
 
response to your eWave questions

Valid response #5: re: Indicators for eWaves. The practical application / art of eWave trading is to identify and participate fully in impulse wave sets and scale back or avoid corrective wave sets. How or if you apply this is ultimately up to you and your minds’ structures. (Actually it is ‘way before’ ultimately up to you and your minds’ structures…but that’s way out of scope) To help you explore this, here are some comments on the use of indicators to appropriately de-jag price and represent underlying wave patterns. Wave purists can make strong arguments that ‘filtering noise’ by ‘de-jagging’ is bad practice. If one is establishing a solid eWave context for the whole impulse wave, taking alternation, extensions, x’s, and other eWave ‘rules’ into consideration, then why the sudden need to occlude / corrupt direct observation of a count with an image of a derived indicator. Also, don’t forget that in addition to simplifying a particular 4 wave (using the William’s example), that exact same MACD ‘visual image’ could be calculated / brought into being from a huge host of other, non 4 wave, price patterns. From another perspective, if instead from the beginning you are practically identifying trend with an indicator, then where is the purpose of a drill down to see the waves creating it.

Valid response #8: Do waves create trends or do trends create waves?

Valid response #13:

Valid response #21: Wearing approved hazardous material gear, contain and properly dispose of all your elliot wave thinking as expeditiously as you can. However …

Valid response #34: If, and only if, waves are something your eyes were made to easily see and your mind was made to understand and trade, I would recommend that you first read everything you can find by Tony Plummer, then really master Glen Neely in detail, then quickly blow through the early Robert Prechter books, then do anything you can google or procure by Tom Joseph, Don Vodopich, Ruggiero, etc. Along the way, also give due consideration to any material that objectively addresses the limitations of Elliot Wave and wave analysis in general. Round out your sylabus with a thorough, detailed chronological study of all Zoran Gayer’s archives.
Concurrently, during this coursework, also take the following ‘lab’ / ‘practicum’. On daily charts, do live wave analysis AND live eWave trading on 1, 2, or 3 instruments. Start with a variation on this - use multiples of 1 lot for corrective wave trades, multiples of 2 lots for impulse wave trades, and multiples of 3 lots for wave 3 trades. Do this and you’ll build the foundation and experience to create your own wave ‘system’ at the level of complexity that’s appropriate to you. Like the Fleetwood Mac song – ‘you can go your own wave’…

Valid response #55: Time frame? Even if you feel a need to be close to the action, get in early, day trade, whatever; across time it’s best not to eWave on less than hourly charts. One general reason for this: eWaves are about collective population patterns. The shorter the time frame, the more it becomes a study of an inadequate fractal ‘sample’ instead a fractal study of the ‘population’. The mystic seers and fractalicians lied to us - As above is not really as below. For ‘populations’, classic 5 3 eWaves are the norm. For ‘samples’, well formed 5’s and 3’s are an anomaly. From a more practical perspective – On very short time frames, a few ‘pretty’ eWaves get mixed in with a bunch of hard to count and even harder to trade waves. ‘Of the essence’ market action only occurs during a small percentage of the total ‘times’, but the auction continues all day and night piling up ticks upon ticks… I don’t think ‘noise’ is the correct word or concept to apply here but it is one that is broadly used, so I’ll just let it throw a brevity blanket on it. With this in mind, you could possibly get below that 1 hour recommendation by using tick bars instead of time bars, but still I wouldn’t advise scaling tick bars much below the equivalent of one ‘during market hours’ hour.

Valid response #89: re Trading Chaos: My read of pgs. 123 – 131 (finally found the book!) as it concerns your questions is - Wave 3 is called over at the histogram osc going below the 5 period ‘signal’ line (fig 7-17). Wave 4 is confirmed by osc cross below 0 line (R on fig 7-19). Wave 4 is over and 5 is called at the hook up of the osc. and Wave 5 is confirmed when osc crosses above 0 late in session on 6/9 (fig 7-19). Osho, to answer your “has already crossed the zero line” question, I think the correct reading is - first crossing was to below 0, next crossing was to above 0. He wasn’t very clear about how to get long for Wave 5 was he? Here’s why – in real life Wave 4’s are more complicated than that. Using this osc. and technique, price can still be in 4 even though osc has gone below and then back above 0 several times. His osc. example is ‘textbook’ and doesn’t have the odds he alludes to – even if you are using the ‘correct’ (100-140) number of bars. Tom Joseph originated the 5/35 technique. Briefly here’s how he sees ends of Wave 4 and Wave 5 entry. His osc only has to pull back a minimum of 50% from the osc’s Wave 3 peak to begin stepping in. A pullback to or below 0 line and he enters with a stop where Wave 1 topped and exits the 5 where Wave 3 topped. Also, you might try osc setting of 3/21 which is almost as smooth and has a little less lag. Using these techniques in the raw will produce a bunch of false starts. False starts are ok only for patient long time framers – they suck for every other time framer. Corrective eWaves are the most variegated and intricate patterns. If a trader is so dang sure there is actually going to be a Wave 5, imho, he should be doing an indicator free granular study of Wave 4 with the intent of stepping in just past the lows and end time of Wave 4 (not the same as bottom fishing) . The material in William’s book for the ‘mental’ side of trading is good, verging on excellent. But NONE of the actual trading techniques are original (except for his clever re-namings) . None of them are breakthoughs. For example on pg. 124 he builds up to this big insight and puts it in italics – (referring to the osc) “It is always measuring an Elliot Wave”. When you break it down, all he really said was – ‘a wave is a wave’ . Well duh huh… in real life, a huge percentage of ‘preferred’ wave counts in ‘development’ are invalidated, a mental recovery is required, and an alternate count ‘activated’…

Valid response #144: Consider this - “Any wave count can be produced, and also collapsed… using ‘progressive zooming in’” and out (source unknown). ANY wave count you want! Did you get that? Furthermore, ‘progressive zooming and out’ can easily be accomplished by the mind spontaneously by the addition of the next bar OR by a viewing of the same chart at a different time even if the next bar(s) aren’t appended OR right before your eyes as you look at a chart – i.e. no change to your chart in timeframe or resolution or number of bars is really necessary for ‘zooming’ to any count. Believe it or not, ANY count can appear, flicker, zoom, be replaced, reappear, flicker, …zoom, zoom… in spite of left brain ‘management’, in spite of ‘disipline’, in spite of ‘rules’! Contrary to the striking computer graphics, few fractals are shapely and pretty. Most fractals are disturbing. Did you get that?

Valid response #233: If you are hooked on indicators, consider direct use of Moving Averages. Robert Kendall uses 10,21,and 40 period Ma’s with the following basic rules. Wave 1 start pattern: all three Ma’s flattening and converging. Wave 2 start signal: pattern: all three Ma’s flattening and converging. Wave 2 end pattern: price below all 3 Ma’s Wave 3 start pattern: close above all 3 Ma’s. Confirmation: 21 Ma reach .25% per period. Wave 4 end pattern: usually 21 Ma, sometimes 40 ma. also 10 and 21 usually converge at bottom. Wave 5 begin pattern: close above 10 ma. Wave 5 end pattern: close under 21 ma.
(Wave 0 begin pattern: convergence of all 3 Ma’s – but what’s a Wave 0??)

Valid response #377: “Hello, my name is ________ and I am an Elliolic. I am coming up on 12 years in recovery. Yes, I still ‘count’ waves but no way like an Elliotician would teach it. I still use G.E.T. on daily charts for one special study that has nothing to do with the Elliot Wave parts of that program. In other words, I can now have the stuff scattered around the office without being tempted… and I can associate with Elliotheads calmly and am not subject to post contact obsessions… I started doing Elliot because my ‘friends’ were doing it… at first it felt wonderful… after a while, doing it still felt great but things weren’t actually working well for me anymore…eventually even my body didn’t work the same, especially my eyes and brains and liver and heart and guts… I lost touch with reality and thought things were better or worse than they really were… as an addict my mood counts became more erratic and fragile and that limited my ability to make good choices… or make and keep commitments …
…The worst part about it is all of the innocent equity that is injured, lost, or killed by those who choose to disobey the laws when they are under the influence of multifarious wave counts… ”


Note: Response #’s 0,1,1,2,3 were excluded because they are not valid. Their ratios are simply not close enough to 1.618 (plus some of them are actually Lucas numbers who cross dress.) Also, some of these responses may subsequently be invalidated because they are opinions posing as views –Socrates, you are more than welcome to quickly point those out to us.

Osho, I sincerely hope this helps… enjoy.

zd
 
ZDO, I already have enough brainwork with juggling all these planets on a day when it seems everyone in the exchanges is playing tiddleywinks with the prices without the added complication of trying to unravel extra constellations. And now you arrive and introduce extra heavenly bodies into the universe I inhabit.
Now I promise you I cannot cope as all of the above is far too complicated for me to cope with., sorry. at least not at the moment, perhaps next week during a quiet spell. Have a good weekend.
 
Just re-read the book, and previous ones were better. Actually, he may have been better of writing a book about trading psychology alone, anyone familiar with a two oscillator method (and most are, after trawling around indicator combo's of any sort) and a bit of price pattern study would likely find it if not trite, highly limiting.
The main thing he tries to make clear, is that it's all in your head, and that can be an unsettling fact . Annoy's the heck outa me, coz i know it's true.
 
Hi ZDO

Thanks for the very detailed reply, sorry I haven't had a chance to catch up on this thread and have just read your comments. It makes for interesting reading !

Thanks
 
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I must say that I love his way of trading as it explains some aspects that are not explained anywhere else.
Go to www.profitunity.com and subscribe to his newsletter ( two issues for free).There you will get new charts with new recommendations.

You will see then how his art of trading might work for you!

Hope that helps
 
Bill Williams

Dear osho67

I felt compelled to reply to your post as I have taken the Bill Williams course and spent time with him and his family in Texas.

I subscribed to the course back in 1998 and went over to Texas in 1999, and what I can say with certainty is that it was a complete waste of money.

I should have realised that the guarantee he provided wasn’t worth spit, as most of these vendors will find some way of squirming out of any refund.

The system (if you can call it all a system) is far too ambiguous and as for analyzing markets in 10 minutes, forget it.

One thing I have learnt in the years since then is that most of what is written simply does not work. Most of the systems out there have been curved fitted to the data.

Bill Williams is no different than any other vendor, he will say anything to sell what amounts to an expensive product and then renege on the guarantee. He would not be likely to tell you the truth, which is that you need to find your own mehtod. I suppose that if he told everyone that key bit of information he wouldnt sell any of his $5,000 courses.

Save your money.

Regards
jackal007


osho67 said:
Has anyone read the book Trading Chaos by Bill Williams and successfully tried out the methods he describes?

Looks very interesting, I haven't finished the book yet but I think it involves Elliot wave BUT with a precise way of knowing which wave you are in, overall the book is saying you can accurately read the market once you understand the underlying structure

It also says that with his approach you can in ten seconds or less analyze any market and decide whether you should be long, short, pyramiding, stropping and reversing or just out.
Any thoughts or comments ?
 
osho67 said:
Has anyone read the book Trading Chaos by Bill Williams and successfully tried out the methods he describes?

Looks very interesting, I haven't finished the book yet but I think it involves Elliot wave BUT with a precise way of knowing which wave you are in, overall the book is saying you can accurately read the market once you understand the underlying structure

It also says that with his approach you can in ten seconds or less analyze any market and decide whether you should be long, short, pyramiding, stropping and reversing or just out.
Any thoughts or comments ?

I have been trading his method successfully for quite a while. For many years, I put off reading any of his books simply because it sounded a bunch of snake oil (too many references to "chaos" in the title) Well, at least for myself, I was wrong. However, it takes more than ten seconds to do the needed analysis in my experience.

But let me caution you that to be successful, it was necessary to apply all the experience that I had accumulated in the markets trading previously and make his methods "my own". In fact, I had already developed my own trading methodology, after several years of trading the markets. My methodology was successful but laborious. Williams' approach allowed me to simplify mine and now it takes less time to analyse markets, identify setups and exits, and manage trades. So did it work out of the box? Probably not. But there is a lot of insight in his writing, both on trading and trading psychology.

It required reading all three books for myself, experimentation, and some acquired market intuition. It cannot be applied on a purely mechanical basis. However, it did help me make much of my trading more mechanical, reducing the amount of analysis and the number of time frames that I had been examining. So it works for me.
 
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