rawrschach
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Anyone use market profile at all?
The great secret to Pin Bars I have found (to my peril) is that you MUST, as TD said on his previous thread, wait for the pin to finish forming, and the next bar to finish to confirm the action. Being away from the screen in the day saw me setting orders above/below pins that had not had their action confirmed by the next bar. This saw me losing on some trades as I was jumping the gun. I'll keep you posted on how things turn out.
Grim
Looking at the charts of cable I've felt a little silly having not been involved in such a move down.
Ljr,
That's what I mean. Sorry I should have been clearer! Sometimes I have seen a pin and rather than wait for the daily bar to finsh (next day) I have jumped the gun and set an order, only that the h/l of the pin was never broken, making it an invalid and early set-up. So I suckered myself in with a lapse of trading discipline by not waiting for confirmation of the pin bar break.
Grim
Yeheheh! same here!
Also, like you say grim, lots of $ pins around today, USDCHF looks good to me.
I closed gbpjpy short omni, not yesterday but day before about this time of night, at 193.48 just after it bounced off the low from the beginning of the year, just under 5:1. Maybe closed it a bit soon ?
The great secret to Pin Bars I have found (to my peril) is that you MUST, as TD said on his previous thread, wait for the pin to finish forming, and the next bar to finish to confirm the action. Being away from the screen in the day saw me setting orders above/below pins that had not had their action confirmed by the next bar. This saw me losing on some trades as I was jumping the gun. I'll keep you posted on how things turn out.
Grim
I closed gbpjpy short omni, not yesterday but day before about this time of night, at 193.48 just after it bounced off the low from the beginning of the year, just under 5:1. Maybe closed it a bit soon ?
Anyway, 5:1 is a great return although your return is less important than watching the market and deciding whether it has futher to go. Just a note for the newbies: It's never good to look at a market and say "well, I think this might go further but I'm up X amount and that's a good return so I'll just get out". If you are in a trade that has the potential to move more why exit it? I think the common misconception is that you are "banking the money" or "protecting the profit". Well, that's all very good. But you are not going to withdraw it all and stop trading are you? All you are going to do is store it in your account for a few hours/days/weeks and then put it back into another market and this time you will not have momentum on your side. (Not if you are trading pins which are by their very nature, reversal bars!)
Hi TD
I have been trying to look for the bigger gains but I seem to struggle with knowing when the trade has turned against me all together or is just a small retracement. Deciphering whether the trade has furhter to go seems to be the biggest problem. As per your teaching and your spreadsheet i try to identify the next two problem/resistence areas and see how price action reacts to these, but I still seem uncertain as to whether they will break through or not, and if i see a reveral pin appearing i tend to get out.
I have attached an example (i know it's a 5min tf - pls don't shoot me - I am also experimenting with PINS combined with RSI)
I took the pin after 8am short - it was going well till it got to my first problem area of S/R 5508 and formed another PIN. This is where i exited. Needless to say the trend continued downwards without me.
I have also repeated this on higher timeframes too. I always do nothing for at least 1 period of the tf i am trading to give the trade a chance. I have also tried rather than closing the trade to move the stop up but then often get stopped out for BE.
any suggestions as to how I could have managed this better would be greatly appreciated.
thanks
Simon
I have been trying to look for the bigger gains but I seem to struggle with knowing when the trade has turned against me all together or is just a small retracement. Deciphering whether the trade has furhter to go seems to be the biggest problem. As per your teaching and your spreadsheet i try to identify the next two problem/resistence areas and see how price action reacts to these, but I still seem uncertain as to whether they will break through or not, and if i see a reveral pin appearing i tend to get out.
I have attached an example (i know it's a 5min tf - pls don't shoot me - I am also experimenting with PINS combined with RSI)
I took the pin after 8am short - it was going well till it got to my first problem area of S/R 5508 and formed another PIN. This is where i exited. Needless to say the trend continued downwards without me.
I have also repeated this on higher timeframes too. I always do nothing for at least 1 period of the tf i am trading to give the trade a chance.
I have also tried rather than closing the trade to move the stop up but then often get stopped out for BE.
Hold on...what do you mean by "the next bar to finish to confirm the action"? I put my orders above or below the pin as soon as the day turns and the next bar begins to print. For the most part, I don't care what the next bar is doing. I either get filled or I don't.
Well the other day I was justifying myself to one of the risk managers as to why I let a 50 tick gain in the Cable come back to breakeven. He was astounded that anyone was going to let 50 ticks turn to nothing and when he asked me I looked him straight in the face and said with all seriousness: "I was waiting to see if it was going to really go". To which he replied: "I would say after 50 ticks it's already gone..."
Phew.. I'm glad you confirmed that T_D, for a moment I thought I was on the wrong track!
Simon,
First off read Omni's post above. Every point he makes is an excellent one.
Thanks TD and Omni,
all those points mke perfect sense now.
the allure of the 5min tf is one that i am trying hard to combat. I think my biggest problem here is that I still haven't managed to catch a really good hourly setup (Daily tend to be too much risk for me). I am not saying they don't exist, far from it, i have seen you guys make several impressive trades - it's just that I seem to miss them, from either someone at work distracting me (what's that all about - don't they know i am learning to trade :cheesy or being away from my desk. I think from a psychological point of view if i was making some gains on a higher tf I would be less inclined to jump into the lower ones. I think the answer is fairly obvious - it's lack of self control
I haven't even managed to finish my trade plan yet - i have been writing it for about 2 weeks now but keep getting side tracked, by the market. Even then I am not sure how I am going to discipline myself to actually follow it.
I have read others have had similar problems and have put it down to the life cycle of learning to trade, so at least I take heart from that - I guess time will tell.
But thanks for the comments will analyse these further
What would you say about scaling in/out of a position?
Personally, it stresses me out to see the average follow me up/down the ladder and makes me get out everytime price consolidates - but we are expected to do it right now as trainees.