Money Management Technical Analysis Trade Management Q&A

We can spend hours searching for the perfect pattern but fail miserably when its time to turn opportunity into profit. As it turns out, most traders do a poor job managing positions, regardless of experience level.

I've received hundreds of questions about this subject over the years and have complied them into a Q&A to help you make the right choices during the trading day.

Q - What time-frame charts do you use in real-time?

A - I track daily, hourly, and 15-minute charts for all my setups and positions. I don't look any other time frames, except for an occasional glance at the weekly charts. This arrangement doesn't change with liquidity, sector or any other variable. I watch these charts simultaneously on three screens, so I don't have to toggle back and forth.

Q - Should I trade with limit orders or market orders? Does it matter whether it's a buy, a sell, or a short? Do you use mental stops or physical stops?

A - I trade through a direct access interface and use limit orders exclusively. I've never placed a market order on a short sale, and don't recommend it under any circumstances. I use mental stops 90% of the time, because I'm in front of my screen all the time. I trust myself to take an exit when the time comes.

Q - Do you favor avoiding trades at the open?

A - Swing trading is price sensitive rather than time sensitive, so we take our trades when they trigger. This can happen at the open or in the quiet of the midday markets. But I still recommend new traders stay away from the first and last hours. They get fooled by the volatility and haven't learned the skills required to take advantage of these periods.

Q - Are whipsaws created purposely and if so, who is creating them?

A - Some whipsaws are intentional, but more often they occur at obvious support and resistance levels which draw in a legion of countertrend traders. In other words, while it's your plan to buy a breakout, someone else is just as convinced a breakout will fail so they sell existing positions or enter new short sales.

Q - How do you know when it's safe to put on a position, with all the whipsaws and fakeouts?

A - Breakouts and breakdowns either go or they don't go. Most of the time you can't tell the difference. Your only course of action is to control risk and take the trade to its logical conclusion.

In a way, you're asking the ultimate Zen trading question: how do I know I'm right? Zen answer, there is no right and no wrong. You manage risk. Do that well, and you're right.

Q - How do we deal with stop gunning?

teva1110-a.gif


A - Notice how Teva Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) ran through four stop gunning exercises in twelve sessions, without price moving out of the sideways pattern. This behavior usually occurs in choppy markets. When there's good order flow, insiders have little interest in generating artificial volume.

Stop gunning is a fact of life in market dynamics so don't try to fight it. Instead use it to your advantage. Stand aside when they occur and wait until you see exhaustion at support or resistance. Then scale into new positions with tight stops.

Q - How many active positions can I manage each day?

A - There are two guidelines to follow. First, what's your skill level? Are you an experienced trader or a new one? Newbies should carry fewer positions at one time. This lets them focus their attention on the action, and not get stressed out when decisions need to be made.

Second, how much time do you have to devote to the markets? You can trade more stocks if you have a lot of free time. If your time is limited, you need to limit the number of open positions. Also, some traders are more organized than others. Can you "multitask" in real time, i.e. do different things at once without losing concentration? If so, you can probably trade numerous positions at one time.

Q - How do you read market sentiment during the day?

A - I start with a bias and let the market show me what it wants to do. If price action supports my bias, I get more aggressive. If it's opposing my bias, I slow down and reconsider my point of view. Many traders confine their analysis to just "up" or "down" for the day, but rigid opinions leave you unprepared to take action if the tape moves against you.

Q - Do you implement a "turnaround" strategy?

A - I operate under the premise that each trade setup, long or short, needs to stand on its own merits. Hitting a stop loss doesn't automatically make it a good trade in the opposite direction. In fact, getting the direction right is the easy part. The hard part is finding reward:risk that's favorable for the new setup.

Q - Bad days seems to come without warning. How do I defend myself?

A - Develop an instinct for how aggressive or defensive you need to be on a given day. This should reflect the danger or opportunity in the market at that time. I call this collaring. Get defensive in dangerous conditions by raising cash and taking smaller positions. Get aggressive in benign conditions by taking bigger positions and pressing the trades.

Q - What indicators do you apply to your intraday charts?

teva1110-b.gif


A - The Teva Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) graphic shows the technical indicator setup I use for all my real-time charts.

Q - When should I scale into positions?

A - Scale into trades when you think you're right and price action is moving in your favor. It's important to recognize when the market is offering you a gift. If everything lines up perfectly, listen to that inner voice and add to the position.

Q - Do you have a sentiment indicator that determines when a rally is short covering vs. real buying?

A - Short covering is easier to see on the tape than on the indicators. It usually looks like water torture, i.e. one tick up at a time and building in intensity. Also many stocks you're watching just sit there because the squeeze is usually confined to sectors favored by traders, like chips or telecom.

Over the years I've found one perfect indicator for a short squeeze. Get real short and then wait. Notice how it ends exactly one tick after you give up and cover your position.

Q - Is it a reversal signal when a stock runs counter to the daily index trend?

A - You can't make a rule that works in this situation all of the time. There are many reasons a stock moves counter to the market. Instead, use the observation as a signal to do more investigation. A strong stock in a selloff market may foretell an acquisition or hidden news. But it can just as easily turn tail the next day and track the market.

Q - What times of day are prone to false breakouts?

A - The markets display numerous intraday time quirks. There is a 3rd bar reversal 15 minutes into the new session. Good moves fade and reverse into the lunch hour. 2:30pm and 3:30pm start well-documented selling impulses. The most dependable moves come in the first and last hours, where the biggest fakeouts also occur.

Q - The market seems harder now than in the past. What's your take?

A - Nothing has changed and nothing ever changes. I once commented to my wife it had been a tough week to find good trades. She cut me off (rightly so) and told me there's always opportunity, and if I didn't see it, it was my problem and not the market's problem.
 
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In this article, Alan Farley answers some of the questions he gets asked frequently in regards to trade management.
 
"I’ve never placed a market order on a short sale, and don’t recommend it under any circumstances."

What is the reasoning behind this?
 
I run for cover whenever someone mentions tight stops. This is, frankly, a very stupid suggestion. I trade FOREX and one thing that really pisses me off is gurus talking about tight stops. Tight stops are like buying a lottery ticket. I never understood people who try to trade Cable with a 30 pip stop, for example. You will get stopped out all the time.

The other overrated nonesense is r:r ratio. This has zero relevance to whether you will succeed or not. if someone goes for 100 pips witha 30 pip stop, his r:r is better than 3:1. What about his odds of being stopped out? I would rather bet on someone who uses a 100 pip stop and a 30 pip profit target.
 
FXSCALPER2 said:
I run for cover whenever someone mentions tight stops. This is, frankly, a very stupid suggestion. I trade FOREX and one thing that really pisses me off is gurus talking about tight stops. Tight stops are like buying a lottery ticket. I never understood people who try to trade Cable with a 30 pip stop, for example. You will get stopped out all the time.

The other overrated nonesense is r:r ratio. This has zero relevance to whether you will succeed or not. if someone goes for 100 pips witha 30 pip stop, his r:r is better than 3:1. What about his odds of being stopped out? I would rather bet on someone who uses a 100 pip stop and a 30 pip profit target.

Not read the article yet, but in reponse to your post, I am completely on the opposite of your opinion there. Tight stops and R:R with 30 SL and 100 target is a much better strategy IMHO.
 
Risk and Reward

I'm with FXSCALPER2 on this - people shouldn't reject a system on its R:R ratio alone. I'm much more interested in a system's Expected Outcome and Volatility. I don't care what the R:R ratio is, as long as the Expected Outcome is positive and I can afford the Expected Volatility.
 
sjalmond said:
I'm with FXSCALPER2 on this - people shouldn't reject a system on its R:R ratio alone. I'm much more interested in a system's Expected Outcome and Volatility. I don't care what the R:R ratio is, as long as the Expected Outcome is positive and I can afford the Expected Volatility.
With 30 TARGET and 100 STOP:

3 wins = 90
3 losses = 300

I know what I'd prefer...
 
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