tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
- Joined
- 14 October 2004
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You can't have a one-tick trend!
Price action is made up of a trend component + cyclical component + noise.
The trend component is an underlying, persistent bias to the direction of the price action.
What's the difference between a trend and random noise if a single up tick is classed as a trend? This implies that there is no noise in the markets!
Noise, huh? I'm off to tell every scalper in the world that they don't actually make any money, I may need a mouthguard.
Why not?
Buy at $1.00 sell at $1.01
or SPI is 4011 sell 4012---50 contracts.
I'm bullish and I'm anticipating a trend up.
There is trending in noise.
The market itself determines the end of a pullback.
But I think you're wanting me to be more specific by naming the criteria that tell me a pullback is finished and the trend has resumed, and it's now time to enter the trade.
I don't work like that. I place my buy order above the last bar while the pullback is still in progress, my aim being to get in as early as possible as the trend resumes.
I first read of this strategy about ten years ago in Elder's Triple Screen Trading System. I tried it and it worked, so I've been using it ever since.
The trend resumption bar can be quite a powerful move and I want to get in near the start of that bar, rather than miss out on that move and get in on the next bar.
That's an aggressive entry but has the benefit of catching the blast off as the trend resumes via a bullish bar.
A more conservative entry would be to buy above the first decisively bullish bar after the pullback. While this is a viable entry strategy, its disadvantage is that you miss the entire move of this bullish trend resumption bar.
For a middle of the road appraoch that's half way between aggressive and conservative, you can put your buy order above the second last bar of the pullback, rather than above the last bar.
Hi Bunyip,
As per your diagram, I understand that you would place your initial stop-loss just under bar 3 – is that correct? What would you do if bar 4 turns out to be a bearish candle like bar 2 (ie. moves up triggering your entry, then heads down closing below your entry price)? Do you exit immediately, or wait to see if the initial stop gets hit?
thanks
To me a move in any direction is a trend.
To others it doesnt qualify as a trend definition.
Frank I'm keeping out of the warm end I dont like the colour of the water.
To make money in the market you need a trend,
but drop the 1 tick move to justify a trend, as it makes no sense in real
time trading.
One tick.. can it be a trend?
Example (on a tick chart)
5000
4999
4998
4997
4996
4995
4996
4995
4994
4993
4992
4991
4990
Personally, i'd say the trend is down, but then it comes back to the question i asked before "How long is a trend", Or as FapTurbo has said when is a trend worth trading?
If we use the definition
"•The general direction, either upward or downward, in which prices have been moving."
www.cftc.gov/educationcenter/glossary/glossary_t.html
Then that 1 tick can't be a trend, it is a counter trend move, as the general direction of the price movement is down.
But then if that chart was a monthly chart, there could be 20 up days within that 1 bar, so then it could be a trend for that one month, but the monthly trend is down.
This is my last post on this thread.
Everyone knows that you need a trend to make money. I’m not going
to dispute that.
The best money made is always and has always been ride the trend as
long as possible. I’m certainly not going to dispute that.
Not quite everyone knows it Frank. Over my years on this forum I've had a couple of arguments with amateurs who speak against trading with the trend, and claim they're doing well as counter-trend traders.
A couple of others have shown such a lack of understanding of trends that they don't seem to know if they're trading with the trend or against it.
I don't argue with them any more - now I just regard them with amusement.
If someone can't see that swimming with the current is easier and more profitable than swimming against it, then I can no longer be bothered trying to convince them otherwise.
Do you have a way of ranking a "trend" ??
Yes.
A strong trend has pullbacks of less than 38%
A good trend 50% or less.
A weak trend >50%
But how does a tick have <50%, >50% or even a 50% retracement?
This thread is deep in the territory of idle semantics, so far I think it made it's way to the warm water.
People won't learn a thing about making money from this chit chat.
Back to moving averages, don't use them. Think simple trend structure would tell you a lot more.
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