Oct 31

This post was contributed by a guest author, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Richard or MovetheMarkets.com


Long time, no write! Yes, I’m here an NOT trading after my BIDU blowup. Working my Seven Step Plan, testing out some ideas on paper and working on my emotions outside of the markets.

My big quest for a system is basically how to tell a trend change / reversal from a shallow retrace / continuation. Quotetracker has a built-in chart type called Renko Charts. This link describes what they are very well. Basically, they are like a PnF chart, only less cryptic IMO. Also, time is compressible, like in tick charts or volume-candle charts, so there’s no information or signals during slow times.

I was playing with Renkos because they provide a solution to the reversal / retrace problem. The trend is defined by the brick pattern. It’s not subjective at all! Choose a Renko brick size (say, $0.10) and you’ve got the trend spelled out. here’s an example I paper-traded in GRMN this morning. I made 10P’s (a P is a paper-traded R for those counting at home):

grmn-renko-last-day_05-2007-10-31-154049.GIF

Nice, huh! The only problem with Renko charts is that they are a trend following method, so in non-trending markets you get whipsawed like crazy (see all the arrows on that GRMN chart? I would have given back lots of P’s through the rest of the day.) I’m trying to play with some different methods to only take signals that have better odds for a trending move. I’ve played with PPO, a stochastic RSI, and choppiness index, but nothing earth-shaking so far. Any ideas on how to cut down on whipsaws would be great!


This post was contributed by a guest author, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Richard or MovetheMarkets.com


Jul 26

This post was contributed by a guest author, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Richard or MovetheMarkets.com


I took 10 trades today in my first full day prop trading. Some were well thought out and some were not. I ended up finishing the day -2.5R down, so after yesterday’s gain my overall PnL is now at -0.5R. My win rate is only 30%. Lots of room for improvement. Today was a wild market day, though I made plenty of mistakes and took some unjustified risks on mediocre setups. I traded a lot off of the 1 minute chart, since I could. When I was down, I wanted to make it back. Just a quick scalp. I better watch that! If I wasn’t keeping my position size so small, I could have lost a bunch today.

One downside of graduating from 1 trade per day to 10 is that I can’t go over all of the trades in detail as I did before. Well, maybe that’s an upside for some of you out there. :/ Most of my trades were too tight for the volatility today. I shorted BIDU, got stopped out at a retrace to breakeven, and then it ran to about 3R later in the day. I also entered GRMN on a flag on the 5 minute, before the consolidation broke, and got nailed for -1R as it broke the wrong way. Lots of ~-0.8R losers, and only a couple of winners.

My best trade today was in Continental Airlines (NYSE: CAL), and it was also one of the only trades I took from the 15 minute timeframe (which should teach me a lesson). I entered at the orange line, stops managed by the red lines, and I took a partial at the 119% fib (blue line 1) as price stalled. The final cover came at the 138% fib (blue line 2), which was also just about the low of the day:

cal-candle-last-2-days_15m-2007-07-26-163941.GIF

Thank you Trader-X for that one. Too bad I missed the entry earlier in the day.

I’ll try to be more selective in my setups from now on, even with my newfound freedom from pattern daytrader rules.

Stocks Mentioned In This Article
StockLinks
CAL | |

This post was contributed by a guest author, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Richard or MovetheMarkets.com


Jul 27

Early on, it looked like I might break through my undertrading barrier today. Several of my watchlist items were sending me alerts. But, as it turned out, most were not tradeable. Let’s see ‘em…

First, National Oilwell Varco Inc. (NYSE: NOV) gapped through my target of 64 on the open. If it were a small gap I’d consider my trading options, but it had gapped all the way to open at 65.50, and approached 68 within the first 20 minutes of trading. So, so much for NOV… I’m noting now that it closed at 64.20, so if it bounces off 64 tomorrow I may get in. Then again, it may be trying to close that gap…

NOV Gaps UP

Next, Ceradyne Inc. (Nasdaq: CRDN) tapped the highchartpatterns target of 50, but didn’t trade in a way that triggered the trade. It made a couple half-hearted tries to re-reach 50, but gave up by noon. So, again, close, but no cigar.

CRDN taps 50

Next, Garmin Ltd. (Nasdaq: GRMN) fell through highchartpatterns target of 95, and triggered the trade. However, it fell so fast my order did not fill, and I’m convinced I would have been screwed on a market order in that action. So, I had to sit this one out. That’s a ten-minute candle, where it falls from 95.65 to 92.07 and climbs back to 94.12. That’s volatility!

GRMN falls too fast

Seeing that Akami Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: AKAM) gapping up, I changed my view of it from short to long, chosing an entry point above 37.40 based on the weekly charts. When I was out at lunch, I got the email that said it traded at my price. Man, I could not get a break! But, I checked with my blackberry a few minutes later, and saw that it had already fallen to 36.20 again. So there wasn’t even a trade to miss! What a frustrating day! But, I’ll note that it closed reasonably strong at 36.83, so any kind of healthy follow-through tomorrow has a chance to get me into the trade.

AKAM can't break 37.40.

So, after I got back home from lunch I made one trade, in United States Steel Corporation (NYSE: X). I got 1.5R out of it. You can see my sloppily scratched blue lines marking my entry and exit.

XmarksmySpot

Unlike yesterday’s 1R loss scenario, I tried to be very aware of whether I felt a need to take profits, or if I feld that the trade was turning against me. You can see that the exit candle closed near its high (I think these are called Doji’s when they close at their open prices, but I don’t believe in the named candle patterns intraday). So, when it was steadily climbing, I decided the stock could reverse. The markets where positive/negative/positive see-sawing in the afternoon. Eventually, you can see that the stock made lower lows by the close, but I would have stopped myself out at breakeven before that, in the candle after my actual exit. So, I am pleased with my choice.

I hope everyone had a good trading day!

On Pivots
After seeing a note yesterday on Trader-X’s blog, I was reminded that I have been meaning to see what pivot points can do in sideways markets. I had read about a pivot strategy for flat markets in a book a few months ago. So, last night and during today’s session, I kept the standard pivot points overlayed on my charts. At first glance, it does appear to be uncanny the way they line up with the actual price action. I know the formulas for the pivot levels, and I can’t think of any reason why they hold so well. One explanation, obviously, is that enough traders use those pivots to make them a self-fulfilling prophecy. Another explanation, is that my eyes are drawn to spots where the prices and the lines match, and I unconsciously ignore all the places where there is no correlation whatsoever. More investigation is needed.

Stocks Mentioned In This Article
StockLinks
NOV | |
CRDN | |
GRMN | |
AKAM | |
X | |