Assume throughout that we are in an up-trend.
Is there any difference between the following two types of divergence:
1)Price makes a higher high, but Stochastics (or RSI) makes a lower high.
2)Price makes lower high, but stochastics makes a higher high.
They are both divergences, just in different ways. Are they exactly the same? Or could there be a difference in subsequent behaviour? At present I have just been considering them as equal, and although I don't trade with this info, I use it as a heads up that things might be changing.
How do others use it? A signal to tighten stops, or to not take trades with the trend? Do they even matter?
The second problem I have (amongst many ) is recognising genuine breakouts. Now I would like to see price burst through a resistance level, and then buy on the pullback to this level. But, often you can see price flying through, and then it retraces quickly to the support level, but that doesn't seem to be a good play to go long there, because it then goes right back down and the breakout failed. It will often go down quite a lot from there. So what filters do people use to recognise a genuine breakout. Sometimes it may seem obvious just from the speed it comes back down, but sometimes it is not so obvious to me. Do you need a bar to both open and close on the top side of that support? Or maybe several bars above, or a move of a set distance from the level?
Is there any difference between the following two types of divergence:
1)Price makes a higher high, but Stochastics (or RSI) makes a lower high.
2)Price makes lower high, but stochastics makes a higher high.
They are both divergences, just in different ways. Are they exactly the same? Or could there be a difference in subsequent behaviour? At present I have just been considering them as equal, and although I don't trade with this info, I use it as a heads up that things might be changing.
How do others use it? A signal to tighten stops, or to not take trades with the trend? Do they even matter?
The second problem I have (amongst many ) is recognising genuine breakouts. Now I would like to see price burst through a resistance level, and then buy on the pullback to this level. But, often you can see price flying through, and then it retraces quickly to the support level, but that doesn't seem to be a good play to go long there, because it then goes right back down and the breakout failed. It will often go down quite a lot from there. So what filters do people use to recognise a genuine breakout. Sometimes it may seem obvious just from the speed it comes back down, but sometimes it is not so obvious to me. Do you need a bar to both open and close on the top side of that support? Or maybe several bars above, or a move of a set distance from the level?
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