DionysusToast
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One of my sins is that I occasionally pop into 'free trials' of trading rooms. I do this perhaps once a month.
There is one I attended last week which was interesting. Basically, their teachings are as follows:
They heavily use the 'inventory' analogy - that you buy inventory of contracts and trading is just like being a retail shop. So - you buy your inventory at wholesale and sell your inventory at retail. Furthermore Pros buy at wholesale prices and non-Pros are buying at retail prices. Obviously, they are teaching you how to trade those wholesale prices.
They claim to be trading order flow but have a fairly simple indicator from which they make decisions about the flow. Not all is revealed in the room.
As the market moved up and down, it was people 'cycling inventory'...
They charge over $2,500 to teach you their methods
The reason I mention this is because a LOT of people in that room fell in love with all the terminology. I would like to discuss this 'wholesale' thing as it is quite common and I am not sure I agree with the implications. I want to know what other members think about it.
Now, I'm not going to name the room but the day in question was Thursday and we saw an overnight low of 1334.25 on the ES and the market went in one direction all day ended up at 1357.25 before giving 3 points back into the close.
Our room 'expert' spent the first 90 minutes looking for an opportunity to short at a wholeseale price.I asked what, if anything would make him consider a long. He said he would not consider going long because these prices were retail. I got disconnected after 90 minutes, some sort of tech issue I am sure...
Now - here's what I don't get. Let's say the concept is correct and that 1334.25 and thereabouts was the wholesale buying price. Who was it that did all the rest of the buying? Non-pros?
I asked the question. "If pros buy at wholesale - who does the rest of the buying" - his answer was that pros buy at the start of moves up and the rest of the buying is amateurs AND shorts exiting.
So let's change to a 5 min chart and add in some volume...
This is odd. It appears that the amount of trading at the lows was very small. If the pros got in here, and that very small amount of trading cause a 20 point short squeeze, then these are some very clever guys indeed.
I put this question to him - how could such a small amount of 'pro' activity cause such a big move up. Sadly, that was were my technical issues started.
Now, I can see the allure of this and I do understand buy low, sell high. Still, what bugs me is that I saw 1000 contract buy market orders firing off most of the morning on the ES. I would describe anyone that trades a 1000 lot order as a pro. There is no way in my opinion that "pros are only buying the lows and stops/amateurs cause the rest of a move".
One of the members here discussed a recent trade where he saw a $47 move up in Gold and nailed the reversal price almost to the tick. That would be a wholesale price. This is something I suffered from in trading for a long while. Watching a move up, waiting for the reversal point, knowing it was moving up, seeing it move up, seeing no signs of weakness yet, point after point after point upwards and NOT GETTING LONG!!!
Seriously - is getting on board an obvious move what amateurs do? Are 'pro's so precise they only buy 'wholesale' ? It must be a very exclusive club 'cause there ain't much volume there.
Here is my 'amateur' trade from... well.. about an hour ago.
This was definitely NOT a wholesale price but it did make money.
So what do you think - is this whole 'wholesale vs retail prices" just a bunch of terminology to wow newbies or is there something to it after all? Will you not blow lots of money trying to predict the 'wholesale price' where the pros enter aka catching a falling knife?
If you blow the terminology away, is there any merit in this market view?
DT
There is one I attended last week which was interesting. Basically, their teachings are as follows:
They heavily use the 'inventory' analogy - that you buy inventory of contracts and trading is just like being a retail shop. So - you buy your inventory at wholesale and sell your inventory at retail. Furthermore Pros buy at wholesale prices and non-Pros are buying at retail prices. Obviously, they are teaching you how to trade those wholesale prices.
They claim to be trading order flow but have a fairly simple indicator from which they make decisions about the flow. Not all is revealed in the room.
As the market moved up and down, it was people 'cycling inventory'...
They charge over $2,500 to teach you their methods
The reason I mention this is because a LOT of people in that room fell in love with all the terminology. I would like to discuss this 'wholesale' thing as it is quite common and I am not sure I agree with the implications. I want to know what other members think about it.
Now, I'm not going to name the room but the day in question was Thursday and we saw an overnight low of 1334.25 on the ES and the market went in one direction all day ended up at 1357.25 before giving 3 points back into the close.
Our room 'expert' spent the first 90 minutes looking for an opportunity to short at a wholeseale price.I asked what, if anything would make him consider a long. He said he would not consider going long because these prices were retail. I got disconnected after 90 minutes, some sort of tech issue I am sure...
Now - here's what I don't get. Let's say the concept is correct and that 1334.25 and thereabouts was the wholesale buying price. Who was it that did all the rest of the buying? Non-pros?
I asked the question. "If pros buy at wholesale - who does the rest of the buying" - his answer was that pros buy at the start of moves up and the rest of the buying is amateurs AND shorts exiting.
So let's change to a 5 min chart and add in some volume...
This is odd. It appears that the amount of trading at the lows was very small. If the pros got in here, and that very small amount of trading cause a 20 point short squeeze, then these are some very clever guys indeed.
I put this question to him - how could such a small amount of 'pro' activity cause such a big move up. Sadly, that was were my technical issues started.
Now, I can see the allure of this and I do understand buy low, sell high. Still, what bugs me is that I saw 1000 contract buy market orders firing off most of the morning on the ES. I would describe anyone that trades a 1000 lot order as a pro. There is no way in my opinion that "pros are only buying the lows and stops/amateurs cause the rest of a move".
One of the members here discussed a recent trade where he saw a $47 move up in Gold and nailed the reversal price almost to the tick. That would be a wholesale price. This is something I suffered from in trading for a long while. Watching a move up, waiting for the reversal point, knowing it was moving up, seeing it move up, seeing no signs of weakness yet, point after point after point upwards and NOT GETTING LONG!!!
Seriously - is getting on board an obvious move what amateurs do? Are 'pro's so precise they only buy 'wholesale' ? It must be a very exclusive club 'cause there ain't much volume there.
Here is my 'amateur' trade from... well.. about an hour ago.
This was definitely NOT a wholesale price but it did make money.
So what do you think - is this whole 'wholesale vs retail prices" just a bunch of terminology to wow newbies or is there something to it after all? Will you not blow lots of money trying to predict the 'wholesale price' where the pros enter aka catching a falling knife?
If you blow the terminology away, is there any merit in this market view?
DT