- Joined
- 14 December 2010
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- 248
The answer is in understanding when a move is going to stall or reverse.
I agree with Billy that there isnt one hard fast rule.
In fact my rules would have seen me out on the next day.(50% of the previous bar)
I would have been only a little worse off had I kept the trade until further analysis gave me strong clues of a reversal.
View attachment 44840
Is your rule 50% of previous bar stop used for wide spread bars?
Do you have a hard and fast rule?
Is your rule 50% of previous bar stop used for wide spread bars?
Do you have a hard and fast rule?
From my observations it seems like these types of trades are the type that have the potential to produce large R-multiple profits.
I've tested old data and have entered a number of these types of trades where price is flat and inactive and then a few days of ultra high volume come in. Quite often I've noticed that even though price moves a lot in percentage terms on these first few high volume days. It is only the beginning of a much larger move.
This is where I seem to by picking up much of my 6R-10R wins. Thoughts?
Pav,
In your Wyckoff reading you should have come across a theory which mentions a relationship between the width of this type of base and the eventual height attained in price. Check it out, you may find an advantage to assist you.
I could give you the info but you will appreciate the discovery much more by working it out yourself
Hi Pav, have you ever compiled some statistics for your trade setups here?
Re: AZG... probably the wrong sector (engineering services) to be looking for a breakout continuation. Your stop at 13 can be easily tagged if you look at the market depth and how it trades.
Why did you cancel the order you would hav been filled.?
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