mgazda 13 posts msg #56617 - Ignore mgazda |
11/9/2007 12:11:43 PM
I've read MILK THE COWS many a time, and I understand that 1% is a bit much to let go before getting in...
...I just thought that if GOOG's ATR is around 2-3%, I might have a chance to grab one percent after the initial one percent move.
Maybe I'm misreading the ATR number.
Thanks for your insight, though.
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TheRumpledOne 6,411 posts msg #56622 - Ignore TheRumpledOne |
11/9/2007 12:43:35 PM
IMHO, ATR is just an "illusion".
HIGH - LOW which is also (HIGH - OPEN + OPEN - LOW) is the real range for the day.
So when the price is above the open, I'm long and when it's below, I'm short to capture the range.
No guessing tops and bottoms.
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mgazda 13 posts msg #56709 - Ignore mgazda modified |
11/12/2007 11:07:43 PM
TRO,
Thanks for this great filter: /* Long Profit Percent Statistics Display */ ...
...I was wondering if it could be tweaked to show what the count for Long_Profit of 1-2%, 2-3% etc, would be, but only for stocks whose open AND close are above yesterday's middle...no middle crosses involved.
Just wondering how the stats look for stocks that "pop".
Thanks again.
Mike
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #56777 - Ignore nikoschopen modified |
11/15/2007 5:39:53 PM
TRO,
Over the years, the appeal for the "middle of the range" has been lost on me. That's because the prior day's high, low and close play more important role than the mid-range. In hindsight, I would say it's nearly useless as a meaningful gauge to determine anything since it's just that: middle of nowhere.
*Edit*
I have not read the thread completely, so I apologize in advance for repeating what others might have stated elsewhere.
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #56778 - Ignore nikoschopen |
11/15/2007 5:58:16 PM
[W]hen the price is above the open, I'm long and when it's below, I'm short to capture the range.
Man, some of ure oversimplified generalizations can really make me feel dizzy. For the record, let's get the facts straight. A stock (or options, futures, as well as forex) don't always stay above their open once they cross above it. Suppose that the stock actually fluctuates above and below its open, which is not unusual, would you buy, sell, buy, sell, and buy and sell some more until you eventually get your way? Of course, there can be many variables that would change this scenario, but to blindly go long when the stock trades above its open and short when below it sounds ludicrous at best and downright insulting for those whose past transgressions have taught them that nothing is simple about the market.
No matter how pointless it might be, I concede the fact that it's not what you trade, but how you trade. But it's also about leveraging ure trades with the highest probability. This can be done by weighing the reward to the possible risk.
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TheRumpledOne 6,411 posts msg #56780 - Ignore TheRumpledOne |
11/15/2007 6:51:52 PM
"...I was wondering if it could be tweaked to show what the count for Long_Profit of 1-2%, 2-3% etc, would be, but only for stocks whose open AND close are above yesterday's middle...no middle crosses involved. "
Yes, that would be simple to add... GO FOR IT!
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TheRumpledOne 6,411 posts msg #56781 - Ignore TheRumpledOne |
11/15/2007 6:54:28 PM
"Man, some of ure oversimplified generalizations can really make me feel dizzy. For the record, let's get the facts straight. A stock (or options, futures, as well as forex) don't always stay above their open once they cross above it. Suppose that the stock actually fluctuates above and below its open, which is not unusual, would you buy, sell, buy, sell, and buy and sell some more until you eventually get your way? Of course, there can be many variables that would change this scenario, but to blindly go long when the stock trades above its open and short when below it sounds ludicrous at best and downright insulting for those whose past transgressions have taught them that nothing is simple about the market. "
TRADING IS SIMPLE!
Please keep in mind that I am a scalper. A long term trade to me is when I own a stock more than 2 minutes.
So, YES, I'll be long, short, long, short many times throughout the day.
Look at AAPL today.. see all those open crosses!! I just SHOWED YOU THE MONEY!
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #56785 - Ignore nikoschopen |
11/15/2007 8:53:09 PM
So, YES, I'll be long, short, long, short many times throughout the day.
Look at AAPL today.. see all those open crosses!! I just SHOWED YOU THE MONEY!
I consider myself a half scalper, half micro-trader since I hold a position anywhere from 1 to 30 minutes (sometimes even longer, although not very often).
Suppose the moment you went long, the stock dropped below its open. You then immediately reversed the position to short and took a loss. But the stock would not go ure way as expected and reversed yet again. Would you at this time sell out of ure position and then reflect on where the stock is heading or would you go long again with another loss?
I've personally experience this kind of crazy action (SNDK was that crazy stock) and it is by no means SIMPLE as you make it out. Only thing that's simple is the pain of adding up all those small losses that amounts to quite a lot at the end.
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TheRumpledOne 6,411 posts msg #100919 - Ignore TheRumpledOne |
5/26/2011 11:50:58 AM
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