Consider, stay long until you would enter short. Stay short until you would enter long.
When you enter in one direction consider what traders looking to enter in the other direction are looking for.
And the perrenial spike-out. You can be right on all accounts, location, direction, target but if you use a stop loss at entry (which I don't recommend not doing unless you play multiple lots and know what you're doing with increasing/lightening(sp), you can still lose because unless you run a huge stop loss and only close out if price CLOSES past a certain point, the market movers will know exactly where you've put it. Yes, they are b@stards but it's all part of trading.
One thing that's just sprung into my mind this morning also is this: the more you see this on charts, if that's how you trade, the harder it actually gets to hold onto a trade for any significant period of time unless you just walk away and leave it to lady luck. What you may start to see is that, depending on your time perspective, price is always moving between supply and demand areas and you never know which ones will hold and which ones will break. For instance for that big momentum move at the end of the last 'trend', for sure, before the last push there was a period of ranging on some small timescale, this range is an area of supply/demand imbalance before the break out and price will tend to target some area apparent on a higher time frame perspective, price moves to where the money is.
Now price will tend to range in this area between zones, one which is maybe only apparent on a low timeframe chart, and the other which is only apparent on the higher timeframe chart, if you only look at one chart you may think 'why is it doing this here?' But price will not move out of this area until all supply or demand in one of the zones is 'sucked up'. So the low risk plays are trading between the zones until price breaks out, but the breakout will possibly be a losing trade for you, or you will be closing your trade out when price breaks out and you MAYBE miss out on the trend which may follow up to the next possible target, unless you have a strategy for getting in on stops.
If you start to think about price moving from stops to entries, and from entries to stops you'll see why (usually) which and where price will pull back in a trend, but you don't know if this will be a pull-back or a reversal (book profits and re-enter??), why it will range etc etc. Of course, no-one has a crystal ball but you'll see it time and time again why price turned there (or your idea of why price turned there anyway).
If you are long you are ALWAYS fading a short move, if you are short you are always fading a long move, don't let the trend you see on a larger chart fool you. If price is gravitating upwards on a monthly chart for example there are plenty large short moves in there - get your chart to only display down bars or only display up bars and you will see more clearly. Uptrend? Yeah what about the 1500 pip down moves??
The larger the move you want to attempt to capture the more money you could have 'won' you have to be prepared to give back. I've fallen 'foul' of this this very week with the ranging on cable. I could/should have been up circa 120-150 pips, money there, in the bag if I had traded in and out but in waiting for a larger move short I've given all of that back and come out of it with about 5! Only last night I gave another 40 pips back which I could have booked because again price bounced of the clear as day demand zone on the 4hr and weekly chart (but we have supply on others), it had hit it at least three times I think, surely it was going to bust through this time. NO
So it's swings and roundabouts - capturing the big pips makes you feel all nice inside - 'hey wow I just got 300 pips on that trade, fantastic' BUT you WILL sacrifice a lot getting that big win. Then of course there are the 'what ifs' what if you miss the trade that would have got you into the final big push? This is why imo back testing, while it has its uses, in terms of finding out your actual expectancy is of limited use because what it never shows you is all the trades you miss, and it's sod's law it will be the big ones you do miss.
TLDR I know
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It's a topsy turvy world. I use you when I mean me, entries are exits, exits are entries, wins are losses, losses are wins, down is up, up is down, charts show the truth, charts are illusions, TA is the law, TA is hogwash, T&S shows the way, T&S shows the way to the poorhouse, time perspectives give us useful information, time perspectives cloud our judgement, certainty is uncertainty, trading is easy, trading is impossible, the more you know the more, the more confused you get. Trade2Win? Trade2Mashyourbrains more like.
Life was so much simpler when there was just a moving average and a pullback to think about. Trading used to be easy, now it's feckin impossible