In your first chart, do you think that angular line break was too high up from the low of the pullback?Ended up having a really bad day:
@cha-ching
Nice job on the retracement.pdf
Thanks a lot for sharing cha-ching. Very useful material.
Shotgun, thank you for comments. You mentioned many very valid points. I agree that the setups I decided to take were not perfect. I leaned on my understanding of context (support/resistance in this case) more. A mistake I made before, but one so hard for me to avoid in current market environment. I find it quite difficult starting out in such a low volatility period. Watching the market and not trading must be a useful exercise, but then in the end of the week when I see Bob's charts I get confused. Last 3 weeks, which I consider to be very slow, appeared to be not bad for the non-trending setups we all were looking for. But for some reason I miss many valid trades and don't see other members spotting opportunities.
Initially I chose this trading method because I thought it would be possible to shorten my learning curve using a very small time frame in a market that has decent volatility. I guess I'll just need to reassess my goals.
Hi,
I think it's better to focus on how not to take invalid setups rather than how to take all valid setups. If you can take only half of the valid trades Bob spotted and avoid bad setups it'll be easy for you to achieve 5 pip a day (For US traders it'll be harder). If you can achieve consistency, with 5 pip a day and 0.5% max risk per trade you get 50% return per year even without daily adjustment of account size (with that you get 65% return, assuming 200 trading days per year).
Maybe you can also follow samich1262's approach, try a higher time frame method to supplement Volman's method during the overlap session, but maybe stick to Volman only during European morning session.
Just my two pips...
Happy trading,
Week 47 was a quiet week from of 70 tick chart perspective. With most US based traders taking off for the holidays (Thursday and Friday) there was not much to be expected in terms of fireworks. The market moved quite a bit in terms of price, though. Still, on the 70 tick and many other intraday frames, the low volume this week translated once again into many choppy ranges, little follow-through and virtually no momentum; in short, pretty much the usual, nowadays. But then again, equally usual is the fact that this environment provides excellent ranges that are highly tradable if only a trader is patient enough to let charts do the work first. A lot of scalpers often entertain the idea that they have to be all over the place, trading every tiny hint and clue found in the chart; after all, they are scalpers, right. But what purpose does that serve in a low volume, nonvolatile environment. Just relax, and let the market build up its ranges. If that is what it prefers to do, then who are we to object. You only need to catch a couple of good solid trades per week to already come out ahead. On balance, the charts do not make it hard, traders do. Attached you find the majority of textbook opportunities in Week 47.
More charts from Bob:
If you'll be kind enough to indulge me - I am not interested in trading these techniques, but I picked up the book and have read through it bit by bit. I am interested in hearing about daily P&L and running P&L achieved by people on this thread.
I am interested in hearing about the psychology you employ though. Say if you go 30 pts into the red after 3 losers in a row (barring any stop movements or early exits)... the day is basically a write off no? 4 winners with no losers seems incredibly unlikely at this point - since forex moves in waves of differing sizes, limiting profit to 10 pips seems... hmm... more like a futures methodology.
Basically I'm saying do any of you ever get the feeling that you're making your lives difficult trading the EURUSD in this fashion? I have looked over some of the graphs supplied, and I have to say that a lot of the missed trades look identical to the taken trades except for the final 3 bars - how they managed to enter the latter and not the former using the same rules seems like stretching the truth to me.
Some of these winning range breaks are barely 10 pts in total yet they so often claim to have skipped over 5 pt moves. Yet that 5 pts could have been half of the 10 needed for the successful break and I don't buy it (if you follow me).
This book, to me, looks like it would do a lot better on a liquid futures index with solid directional moves rather than forex waves.
This question has come up a few times now. I may as well lay down my stats. They're not spectacular by any means. I'm still struggling to make any serious profit with this system but after almost 2 years of trading full time, this method has given me the most success.
Over the past 4 months I've made the following...
July - 19 pips
August - 24.1 pips
September - 12.9 pips (I went on holiday for 2 weeks though)
October - 29.4 pips
Prior to this I wasn't trading live with real money so those stats are fairly pointless.
The most I have suffered is 4 losers in a row, however this was spread over a number of days and the total only came to -19.8 pips. I've never suffered a loss of 10 pips. My average loss is 5.4 pips. I also have a rule that if I suffer a loss of 20 pips or more in a single day I will stop trading for that day.
I quite often have 4 or more winners in a row. My maximum is 6. Again though, this is never in the same day.
Yes, it is difficult. However, like I said earlier, it is the best method I have found thus far and has given me the best results. The differences between a valid and invalid setup are subtle but you do get used to them. I trade very conservatively so I skip a setup if I'm not 100% convinced that it's valid. This does lead to a lot of missed opportunities but I don't really care that much, as long as I'm making a profit and getting better results month by month.
I'm not following you here. Sorry.
I've thought about looking at employing this method on a futures index once or twice. However, a few things put me off... Set opening hours. Less flexibility in scaling up your position size. Wider spread (as far as I could see but perhaps I was looking at a crap broker). I'm open to suggestions though...
Anyone can critique the way I handled this ?
1. The barrier wasn't very clear and I had to adjust the rectangle at least 2 times before I entered.
2. Overall conditions: that might be a head and shoulders pattern inside of the box, but that might be stretching it a little. I couldn't read any other clues. A double bottom would've been better.
2. My entry: the squeeze wasn't perfect but it wasn't bad either.
3. Exit: I sold on the breaking of the little doji support pattern. I'm still not very good with tipping point but it seems valid to me. I'd really like some comments on this
4. Price reverses, builds a perfect squeeze and breaks out for a nice 10 pip run.
Yey for trading on simulation, I would've been really pissed if it was with real money.
Thanks for the responses - what I meant was that some of the trades marked up on the charts that were skipped were near identical in behaviour to trades that were taken later, the latter only developed into winners given time, time which wasn't given to the skipped trades, but no satisfactory explanation was given as to why the skipped weren't entered and allowed to develop (in my mind). I could be mistaken, perhaps I should read the annotated versions more closely.
All I would say is that this stopping trading mindset some people have doesn't make sense to me. The correlation to profit/time is rather set depending on your method. Any behaviour in price action that causes you to struggle and you've been struggling on, is more likely to change than it isn't. I.e. in basic terms, a narrow ranging market is likely to have an explosive and sudden trend and vice versa for example. It's like shunning the fact you're a profitable trader over time. However, if it sorts your head out for the next day then fair does. I was just too bloody minded to allow myself to have a losing day.
I was going to say you could try dax futures through a DMA broker or on one of the 1-pt spread betters, but come to think of it, it's not the best idea if Volman didn't intend it.
This question has come up a few times now. I may as well lay down my stats. They're not spectacular by any means. I'm still struggling to make any serious profit with this system but after almost 2 years of trading full time, this method has given me the most success.
Over the past 4 months I've made the following...
July - 19 pips
August - 24.1 pips
September - 12.9 pips (I went on holiday for 2 weeks though)
October - 29.4 pips
Prior to this I wasn't trading live with real money so those stats are fairly pointless.
The most I have suffered is 4 losers in a row, however this was spread over a number of days and the total only came to -19.8 pips. I've never suffered a loss of 10 pips. My average loss is 5.4 pips. I also have a rule that if I suffer a loss of 20 pips or more in a single day I will stop trading for that day.
I quite often have 4 or more winners in a row. My maximum is 6. Again though, this is never in the same day.
Yes, it is difficult. However, like I said earlier, it is the best method I have found thus far and has given me the best results. The differences between a valid and invalid setup are subtle but you do get used to them. I trade very conservatively so I skip a setup if I'm not 100% convinced that it's valid. This does lead to a lot of missed opportunities but I don't really care that much, as long as I'm making a profit and getting better results month by month.