Which day trade is higher risk?

–          Which is higher risk?  Long or short?
o    We use specific trade patterns and entry rules to determine which direction is a higher % or higher risk trade
o    Sideways Range:
§  At the highs, look to sell (High % short)
§  At the lows, look to buy (high % is the long)
o    Price Channel:
§  At the highs, look to sell (High % short)
§  At the lows, look to buy (high % is the long)
o    Price Wedge
§  At the highs, look to sell (High % short)
§  At the lows, look to buy (high % is the long)
§  For the channel, wedge, and the sideways range, the higher RISK trade is buying at the highs and selling at the lows
o    FYI:  If we are in the MIDDLE of these trading range (channel, sideways, wedge) we consider BOTH SIDES as High Risk because the middle is the chop zone.
o    Momentum:
§  Overbought = long trades are high risk
§  Oversold = short trades are high risk
o    Size of the orders:
§  Reading tape and watching the specific SIZE of every order that comes into the market, this gives me clues to the BIG MONEY direction.
§  Large size on the SELL side, the LONG position is higher risk
§  Large size on the BUY side, the SELL side is higher risk
§  Higher risk trades are taken in the opposite direction to your BIG ORDERS on the time and sales window.
o    Speed of the Orders:
§  I need to read the tape and the speed of those orders coming into the market will tell me clues to who is in control of the market.
§  Rising Speed with big buyers makes the LONG trade the Highest %
·         Falling speed with big buyers does NOT qualify as a high %, but is NOT a high risk either
§  Rising Speed with BIG SELLERS makes the SHORT trade higher %,
·         Falling speed with BIG SELLERS does not qualify as High %, but its also not higher risk.
§  I can get away with falling speed as long as I have the BIG MONEY ORDERS coming into the market.
§  It may be wise to use caution with slowing speed, but doesn’t disqualify the trade entry if you have compensating factors.
–          Fake-out breakout
–          Token Print
o    Show up at the HOD/LOD and any swing high/low
o    There’s unlimited areas where token can show up
o    Token = false
o    Token print = false print, fake-out breakout
§  In today’s example
§  New lower low at the LOD
§  But then the buyers grab it and with excessive speed and size of the orders we bounce off this low
§  At this point, this is nothing more than a bounce
§  When we see this now continue then we have confirmation this is our token
§  Now that we see the token at the lows, and we get feedback from the buyers coming in, we now consider the buyers have taken control
§  This means buying pullbacks, buying on the way up.
–          Big Money Trigger Line
        
o    We take profit at the BMT
o    Not the best entry location
–         
–          What if we DO NOT see BIG MONEY?
-We can’t take the trade as high %

    schooloftrade

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    Anonymous - April 21, 2011 Reply

    Do the big guys disguise their orders in by breaking up their orders into smaller parts and can then look like speed? Does speed some time mean a market reversal?

    Thanks

    Joseph James - April 21, 2011 Reply

    – They do this ALL THE TIME
    – Telegraphing is very common = when you see a LARGE order on your DOM (not the tape) and then its quickly removed.
    – Does the speed of these orders make a difference?
    – Speed is the main component in a price reversal
    – As prices rise, im looking for speed to slow down, and then sellers enter the market. When momentum gets over-bought and curls down I then enter the trade.
    o http://www.sidewaysmarkets.com/2011/02/how-to-predict-price-reversals

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