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It might comfort you to know that I share some of your uncertainty and have genuine admiration for your willingness to view those statistics critically.
Are you certain it's the smart money buying the weekly high or selling the weekly low ? Sounds to me more like another kind of money operating at those extremes.
In bull markets Friday closes high as people rush to get involved, in bear markets people don't want to hold through the weekend....Fridays close lower
Given that many traders prefer to avoid carrying net directional exposure over the weekend
For both these to hold true then there should be an increased volume on Mondays and Fridays?
Rancho's relative volume should reveal this on a daily chart Can, is the relative volume increased on Mondays and Fridays?
For both these to hold true then there should be an increased volume on Mondays and Fridays?
Rancho's relative volume should reveal this on a daily chart Can, is the relative volume increased on Mondays and Fridays?
Not necessarily! Have you heard about the practice of ratcheting?
No I have not???
OK, what I surprise I am having a few issues with looking at this, including but not limited to not having excel, not having a working network and not having any Excel skill.
Working on all 3. Will post when I do eventually have a result
It was a technique that some participants have been accused of using to manipulate price action during periods of low volume.
I only mention it, because it highlights (amongst other things) that extreme prices can, and often do, occur during periods of low volume.
All I can find is something relating to dilution. Will have a look tomorrow when a page might actually load in less than 5 mins.
I accept that extremes can and do often happen during low volume. But that is not what you implied. If there is a larger number of traders trying to get net flat towards the end of the week to avoid the weekend, volume should be high. This makes a very very big assumption that they are long in a bull market though....... hmmmm
I think we might be on a slightly different page here. Volume traded and number of traders don't typically correlate.
A possibility to consider (just one of many):
There are two parties to each transaction, some long, some short, some large, some small, some smart, some dumb and a deadline looming (i.e. the weekend). Some dumb shorts are desperately buying back their position, for whatever price they can get and the smart longs may well be the ones squeezing those exorbitant prices out of the dumb shorts.
They would be dumb shorts, apparently there is high chance Monday will put in a low:
I take what you are saying onboard and simple assumptions like it takes volume to move the market will not always stand up
front contract on cmc shows $SPX all-clients at :1zhelp: 95% sell to open and (that's 5% long)
HSI players backed right off their bullish stance to be just 51% longs
lemony squeezy rockets, anyone?
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