dbphoenix
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Hi Db, a couple of questions if you don’t mind...
Was the LOLR also down this morning (Tuesday pre-open), though with less certainty than yesterday? Are these valid reasons to expect a down day: 1) reversion to the mean of the last SL to SH (50% line); 2) 4330 has flipped from support to resistance and price is bouncing off it; 3) a new range is tentatively forming between 3905 - 4330. (Seems like all three reasons are aspects of the same general idea -- reversion to mean in a range.)
The LOLR has been down since 8/20, and we've already dropped to the mean of the weekly channel, bounced off of it, and returned all the way back to the range we fell out of on the 20th. We then began falling again. We may return to the mean again, or we may drop all the way to the lower limit of the old channel, around 3600.
If one is daytrading, though, one must follow the market's lead. Yes, the LOLR is down, but the market may not accommodate this within a day, every day. There are trends and counter-trends. Fortunately, if one follows the SLA, he needn't concern himself with which is which. The SLA acts as a rudder.
Your question, then, is unanswerable without knowing what interval you want to trade. If you look at an hourly chart, the trend is clearly down. However, if one looks at smaller intervals, there are waves in both directions within those "bars". This morning, for example, there was a 2-hour upwave from 0500 to 0700. Then price began moving down toward the open. If one were trading at 0700, he'd have a nice ride to the open. If he weren't, then he'd wait for a reversal, which occurred a little after 0900, and that led to a 75pt rise. None of which would be of the least interest to someone trading an hourly interval, much less a daily interval.
“As I attempted to illustrate in my last post, the context will play the primary role in whether or not the trade succeeds.”
“Combining all of these...”
Does the above mean that when the LOLR is down we’re interested in shorts primarily? or exclusively? As I understand the SLA, if the market is trending up on a down day and a long opportunity presents itself, one would take it regardless. If so, is it a matter of shorts being the more likely to succeed on LOLR down days? Or of leaning toward opportunities where the charts are in alignment and pointing in the same direction?
Thank you! Your replies are very helpful.
Don't expect anything and avoid biases. If one is presented with a nice trend day, the LOLR will keep him in for most or all of it, like those we've had recently. Otherwise, one must follow the market's lead. One could trade short only with an LOLR that's down, but he'd be missing out on some nice counter-trends, like this morning. Since the market isn't fractal (contrary to popular belief), you won't likely find all the intervals to be in alignment, partly because all charts are tick charts, albeit bundled in different quantities. That software providers have elected to provide traders with 1m and 5m and 15m and 60m bundles is not something that the market cares about one way or another. As far as the market is concerned, it's all ticks. Traders who mix things up with custom intervals, like 3m and 7m and 13m and so forth, have little trouble understanding this.
I realize that this is a different way of thinking, though there's nothing new about it. Tape readers and scalpers probably have less trouble with it than chartists because even though charts are excellent aids for organizing data, the market couldn't care less about them, much less all that traders plot on them.
Listen to what the market is telling you. "Judge the market by its own action". This morning, for example, after exiting that first upwave, an attempt to trade in the opposite direction after the line break didn't work because price held at the halfway point of the upwave. That didn't mean that one shouldn't follow the rules and not take the short because there was no way of knowing in real time whether price would hold there or not. When it did, the short became a loss of a couple of points, a small price to pay after an upmove of 75 points.
If one is trading the basic SLA, the most important consideration is to follow the rules. If one can't, or won't, then he'll have to modify it in some way to make it his, but, by doing so, he'll have to start over from the beginning, which is why Developing A Plan is included. If however he can follow the rules and does so, he'll find that the SLA keeps him on track and out of trouble.
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