Posts tagged ‘support’

ES Emini Day Trading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 6 December, 2009, No Comment

As would be expected, much better-than-expected numbers for the November employment situation sent equities up sharply early in the day on Friday. But by close, stocks had come down significantly as many traders simply worried that equities have gotten too far ahead of economic conditions. Also, the dollar jumped on the release of the jobs report and weighed on materials and energy sectors. Still, for the day and week, most indexes posted moderate to sizeable gains.

ES Emini Day Trading: Chart Trading Patterns-Part 2

By trader7757, 1 December, 2009, No Comment

Wedges are considered continuation patterns. The rule of thumb when analyzing or trading an established trend is to follow the trend until it breaks or transitions to a sideways market cycle. The break of a trend is defined by prices trading through the resistance of a downtrend or the support of the uptrend. Wedges can help a trader find an entry point within the context of a trend—which, contrary to belief, is a difficult thing to do correctly. Just because a market is trending doesn’t mean that any entry with the trend is a good one. The wedge offers a trader a point at which to short resistance at the upper downtrend line or play the reversal of the trend, which also is defined by the upper downtrend line.

Chart patterns can develop simultaneously across multiple time frames as well, so they are particularly well suited to handle any trader’s demand, from the end-of-the-day trader to the most hyperactive daytrader. So far, we have looked at chart patterns as they have developed in the indexes, however, chart patterns are especially accurate in the forex market due to its 24-hour trading. The US dollar/Japanese yen 15-minute chart in Figure 3 shows a symmetrical triangle forming.

chart
Click to Enlarge

A symmetrical triangle is formed with a downtrend line and an uptrend line. Earlier, we mentioned that understanding a pattern’s quality is crucial to trading patterns—that every pattern is not a trade, but a potential set up. This pattern is a good quality symmetrical pattern for a number of reasons. The two keys to look for are the balance of the pattern and the balance of price.

Specifically, we are looking for the two trend lines to form a triangle that is squeezing price in a way that if we were to imagine folding the pattern in half lengthwise, the angles would be almost identical. In other words, the angle of the trend lines must be balanced. The other visual cue to be aware of is whether prices are balanced within the pattern. This balance can be seen if prices are bouncing off both the downtrend and the uptrend lines. As this symmetrical triangle pattern was developing, another pattern on the US dollar/Japanese yen was also shaping up. A rising wedge was developing on the 15- and 30-minute charts (Figures 4 and 5, respectively).

chart
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chart
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As you can see, both of these patterns were using some of the same touch points to create the uptrend lines. In rising wedges, there are two uptrend lines where the lower one is support and the upper one is resistance. In rising wedges, we must be especially mindful of the lower uptrend line support because this is the level at which we can buy a bounce. If this level breaks, it could signal a reversal of the uptrend in which the pattern formed.

These two patterns were not the only opportunities a chart pattern trader could take advantage of. Another 15-minute rising wedge had also formed and this wedge was a larger pattern (Figure 6).

It used many of the same touch points, but the difference between this rising wedge and the smaller rising wedge is that the “look back” of this pattern was longer. Look back is the amount of data used to form the pattern. In this case, you can see that the look back goes to 7/31, as opposed to the smaller wedge that originated on 8/1. This may seem like a small difference, but consider that the charts are 15-minute time frames and that each new hour presents four new candles. The difference of even just six hours is 24 new candles from which to connect touch points and create a pattern.

chart

Let’s look at some more examples. Again, remember all your studies should be geared toward training your eyes to notice the nuances of patterns because this allows you to make the distinction between good, better, and best patterns. So far, we’ve looked at patterns that are dominated by trend lines. Now let’s examine patterns formed by more horizontal levels.

A rectangle pattern is similar to a channel. The difference between the two is that a channel is typically narrow and a rectangle is wider. It’s much like the difference between accumulation and distribution. Just like triangles, rectangles (and channels) can develop simultaneously across multiple time frames.

Let’s take a moment to discuss time frames. Ultimately, which time frame you chose to trade should be based upon the quality of the pattern and risk/reward ratio it presents. Other considerations are more individual.

For example, if you are an intraday or full-time trader, many shorter-term time frames will be available to you for analysis. However, if you are a part-time trader or someone who prefers to look at the charts once or twice a day, then certainly, longer-term intraday charts, like the 240-minute chart or the daily will suit your time constraints or preference. Regardless of your preference, it must be said that chart patterns that develop on daily charts are more psychologically significant than those that develop on any intraday time frames. This is mainly because daily charts are by far the most followed by the general public.

My philosophy on time frames runs somewhat counter to the prevailing approach. While most traders look to longer time frames to confirm the movement on a shorter time frame (known as multiple time frame confirmation), I do not subscribe to this.not at all. In fact, my belief is that the smaller time frames are the “canary in a coalmine” and give a trader acute and more sensitive cues to shift in the market. Taking this one step further, treat each time frame as a stand alone and remember that the 15-minute chart is the building block to the 30-minute, and the 30-minute is the building block to the 60-, to the 240-, and then to the daily. A trend shift starts on the shorter time frame, and if that shorter time frame persists enough, it will affect the larger time frame, and so on.

One of my students told me that I described this effect as the “stream leading to the river leading to the ocean.” I frankly can’t remember saying it, but it sure is accurate! So the 30- and 60-minute charts would be the stream, the 180- and 240-minute charts the river, and the daily the ocean. These time frames are simply my preference when analyzing forex. Some traders use a 15-minute chart, which one of my students called the “creek that leads to the stream.” Well said.

This rectangle appears on the 15-, 30-, and 60-minute charts (Figures 7, 8, and 9, respectively).

The horizontal support and resistance levels that created the rectangle all use the same touch points. The main determination of which one to trade would be which pattern was the best example of a rectangle. After this determination, you would follow your preference for a specific time frame. As you can see, chart patterns offer accuracy, flexibility, and the boundaries traders need to identify in order to locate where we choose to enter a trade. Most of us have studied these powerful and simple-to-understand tools. Just do not make the error in thinking simple is ineffective.

chart
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chart
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chart
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My continuing trading adventure is sprinkled with many things I would have never thought I would be doing, like public speaking and seminars, online classes, software development, books, and more. In the end though, I know it’s just me and my charts. My friends and family even joke that I’m “off the chart” on weekends and vacation. When I present my trading approach at any of the Expos where everything always seems “new and improved,” “hot,” and “advanced,” I am proud to say that the people who taught me were those who traded, wrote, and taught in the early 1900’s, and that the tools to my trade are a century old. That’s before computers, television, and back when “Wall Street” was a street with a tall wall built along it! Time-tested, tried and true suits me just fine

ES Emini Day Trading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 25 November, 2009, No Comment

The Reuter’s/University of Michigan’s Consumer sentiment index for early November fell back a very steep 4.6 points to a very weak 66.0. Weakness was split between current conditions and the outlook. The retreat in confidence was tied to the still contracting jobs market.

ES Emini Daytrading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 24 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/24/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1130.42 1158.08 1083.83 1056.17 1009.58

Fed and Fed Agency Announcements

GDP
[Report][Star]
8:30 AM ET
Redbook
[Bullet
8:55 AM ET
FOMC Minutes
[Bullet
2:00 PM ET

GDP

Released on 11/24/2009 8:30:00 AM For Q3:09
Prior Consensus Consensus Range
Real GDP – Q/Q change – SAAR 3.5 % 2.8 % 2.5 % to 3.4 %
GDP price index – Q/Q change – SAAR 0.8 % 0.8 % 0.8 % to 0.8 %

Market Consensus Before Announcement
GDP for the third quarter in the advance estimate came in stronger than expected with a 3.5 percent gain, following a 0.7 percent dip in the prior quarter. The third quarter boost was the first positive GDP number since a 1.5 percent increase for the second quarter of 2008. Cash for clunkers did add substantially to third quarter growth as motor vehicle output added 1.66 percentage points to the third-quarter change in real GDP after adding 0.19 percentage point to the second-quarter change. Inflation is still subdued as the GDP price index edged up 0.8 percent, following no change in the second quarter. Looking ahead, more recent monthly numbers indicate a downward revision to third quarter growth—including negatives from monthly international trade and business inventories

ICSC-Goldman Store Sales

Released on 11/24/2009 7:45:00 AM For wk11/21, 2009
Prior Actual
Store Sales – W/W change -0.1 % 0 %
Store Sales – Y/Y 2.4 % 3.3 %

Highlights
Easy year-over-year comparisons look to make for strong mid-single-digit gains for November same-store sales, according to ICSC-Goldman. The week-to-week pace in the Nov. 21 week was unchanged but not the year-on-year pace which rose nearly 1 full percentage point to plus 3.3 percent for the best reading in more than two years. The report sees this rate increasing in the Nov. 30 week, predicting strong sales on what it calls “Bargain” Friday and also strong sales on the following Saturday. But year-on-year comparisons are not what the financial markets move on. It’s month-on-month that counts. Redbook, up at 8:55 ET, does offer a November-to-October measure.

Daily Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 23 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/20/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1094.83 1095.17 1094.42 1094.08 1093.67

Fed and Fed Agency Announcements

Existing Home Sales

Released on 11/23/2009 10:00:00 AM For October, 2009
Prior Consensus Consensus Range
Existing Home Sales – Level – SAAR 5.57 M 5.700 M 5.290 M to 5.900 M

Market Consensus Before Announcement
Existing home sales in September spiked 9.4 percent to a 5.57 million annual rate. Existing home sales have been on a healthy uptrend in recent months, showing gains in five of the last six months. Recent numbers have been boosted by the clock ticking down on tax credits for first time home buyers with closing required by November. Tax credits have been extended and expanded but we are likely to see an easing in sales as there are not as many in the eligibility pool for these tax credits as in earlier months. And rising unemployment is weighing on other potential buyers.

ES Emini Day Trading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 16 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/16/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1097.42 1103.33 1090.08 1084.17 1076.83

Fed and Agency Announcement

Retail Sales
[Report][Star]
8:30 AM ET

Ben Bernanke Speaks
12:00 PM ET

We had some decent reports today and the market is off to the races.  Let’s see what Big Ben has to say later today. I have no doubt we will be treated to glowing reports and rosy prognostications.  Still, it just doesn’t feel good.

ES Emini: Daily Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 10 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/10/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1099.75 1107.75 1084.00 1076.00 1060.25

Daily Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

Redbook
[Report][Bullet
8:55 AM ET

Dennis Lockhart Speaks
9:15 AM ET

Janet Yellen Speaks
10:00 AM ET

Richard Fisher Speaks
7:30 PM ET

ICSC-Goldman Store Sales

Released on 11/10/2009 7:45:00 AM For wk11/7, 2009
Prior Actual
Store Sales – W/W change 0.1 % -0.1 %
Store Sales – Y/Y 1.9 % 2.9 %

Highlights
ICSC-Goldman’s same-store retail index ended six straight weeks of gains, down 0.1 percent in the Nov. 7 week to mask a plus 2.9 percent year-on-year rate that’s the best since August last year. ICSC, which stands for the International Council of Shopping Centers, often conducts special surveys, and their latest indicates that shoppers plan to put off holiday shopping until the Friday after Thanksgiving, which the report said is now being dubbed “Bargain Friday” instead of “Black Friday,” the latter referring to the first day of retailer profitability. The report, as others, expects year-on-year rates to continue to improve as retailers lap comparisons with last year’s deep recession. Redbook will post their results at 8:55 ET.

Redbook

Released on 11/10/2009 8:55:00 AM For wk11/7, 2009
Prior Actual
Store Sales Y/Y change 0.9 % 1.7 %

Highlights
Year-on-year rates are definitely on the increase in the retail sector which is beginning to benefit from easy comparisons against last year’s deep recession. Redbook reports a plus 1.7 percent year-on-year rate in the Nov. 7 week, the best since September last year. ICSC-Goldman, issued earlier this morning, shows the best year-on-year rate since August last year. But what this means for the month-to-month comparison is uncertain. Redbook’s first take on October vs. November is very positive, showing a 4.3 percent gain but one a little weaker than the targeted 4.8 percent gain. Redbook says retailers are promoting hard trying to make each day a “Black Friday” with deep discounts and early holiday displays.

Lots of Fed Speak this afternoon as two FOMC give separate speeches this afternoon.  Perhaps the market may take some interest in these speeches, though I cannot discern that the market, at this juncture, is paying attention to anything.  Also, plenty of sales data, which should give some guidance on how the Christmas shopping season may play out.

We made new yearly highs in several of the stock index contracts yesterday. which I wrote about yesterday afternoon.  I would suspect that much of the volatility we experienced earlier in the year may return as the market thrashes about in full bull or bear market rally mode.

Daily Pivot and Fed and Fed Agency Announcements

By trader7757, 4 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/04/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1041.83 1042.42 1041.42 1040.83 1040.42
ISM Non-Mfg Index
[Report][Bullet
10:00 AM ET

Daily Pivot and Fed Economic Data for Monday

By trader7757, 1 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/02/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1054.00 1075.00 1041.75 1020.75 1008.50

Federal Agency Announcements and Economic Data

ISM Mfg Index
[Report][Star]
10:00 AM ET

Daniel Tarullo Speaks
10:30 AM ET

ISM Mfg Index Consensus

Market Consensus Before Announcement
The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index was little changed in September at 52.6 from August’s 52.9. Importantly, it was still over 50, indicating that more purchasers are reporting expansion rather than contraction. The new orders softened a bit in September, but remained very positive and strong at 60.8—down from 64.9 in August. Prices paid continue to show upward pressure, coming in at 63.5 and down only marginally from 65.0 the prior month.

Construction Spending Consensus

Market Consensus Before Announcement
Construction spending rebounded 0.8 percent in August after declining 1.1 percent in July. The boost in spending in August was led by a 4.7 percent jump in private residential outlays. In contrast, private nonresidential slipped 0.1 percent and public outlays dropped 1.1 percent in August. Looking ahead, based on the recent uptrend in housing starts (up in four of the last five months), the private residential component for outlays will likely post a gain for September. But high vacancy rates weigh on the nonresidential component as does state & local government revenue declines on public outlays.