The SAFEST Entry Technique - 18 Period Moving Average MethodA great deal of viewers have contacted me asking how I "time" the market. In other words, once I've identified a market as "set up" (via COT strategy or Valuation Strategy), how do I get into a trade.
This video is the first in a series that will outline the entry techniques that I use.
18 PERIOD MOVING AVERAGE ENTRY METHOD:
By far, this method is the safest change of trend confirmation that you will find. There are other entry techniques that will get you into the market sooner, sure. But those other entry techniques come with greater risk, and could be called "bottom picking" to some degree.
The 18 Period MA Entry Method is simple.
STEP 1: Plot the 18 period SMA on your chart based on the closing price.
STEP 2: For LONGS , you need to see two full range candles form ABOVE the MA. From there, mark out the highest high of those 2 candles. When price trades up into that high, the trend has officially changed to bullish. For SHORTS , you need to see to full range candles form BELOW the MA. From there, mark out the lowest low of those 2 candles. When price trades down into that low, the trend has officially changed to bearish.
CAVEAT: We do not count inside bars (bars that form within the range of the previous candle). If you see inside bars, skip them and continue your 2 bar count.
STEP 3: Enter at market when high/low is breached. Risk management is something I will review in another video, but generally, I add/subtract 120%-150% of the 3 bar ATR.
CLARIFICATION: To be clear, this entry technique should not be traded blindly. You need to have a REASON to take the trade (for example, COT strategy suggests a market is setup for a trade, or the Valuation/Ducks in a Barrel setup suggests a market is setup for a trade).
CREDIT: I credit Larry Williams, Tom DeMark, Brian Schad & Jake Bernstein for their influence in these ideas.
If you have any questions about this entry technique, feel free to shoot me a message.
Good Luck & Good Trading.
Entries
Using Fibonacci & FPT To Identify Trends/Entries/ReversalsLearn how powerful Fibonacci Retracements and Fibonacci Price Theory are when adequately deployed.
It can tell where and when to target entries, trends, risks, and reversals.
Anyone can do this when they learn to efficiently manage the ranges and use Fibonacci tools in Trading View.
It's time you took a few minutes to learn the PRICE is the ultimate indicator. You don't need to use dozens of other indicators (unless you want to add to the core Fibonacci techniques).
Watch this video, then follow my research/videos.
Trade Discipline - Improving Your Entries
How many times have you been stopped out of a great trading idea you noticed just because you missed your original entry and decided to enter at a worse price?
This was most likely due to the fear of missing out (FOMO) and lack of discipline that got you into the trade.
You were right on the market direction, but due to FOMO and your lack of discipline, the trade entry was bad, and you ended up being stopped out, only to then painfully watch the market go your way.
Do not feel bad, as this has happened to the best of us, so this post will discuss methods on how to improve your entries and discipline to ensure that you do not get stopped out again because of a bad entry.
Never chase missed entries.
Let’s say the market is in a nice healthy trend, making a series of higher highs and higher lows. And when you overlay the 20-day moving average over it, you notice the market bounce off the moving average quite a few times. You then get a buy signal near the moving average, but unfortunately, you missed the entry and are just watching the market go up without making any money from it.
Now, when you look at the chart, the market is very far away from the 20-day moving average. So even though the market is currently in an uptrend, ideally you don’t want to be buying now because, from looking at your analysis, the market tends to pull back to the 20-day moving average. If you impulsively buy when the price is very far away from the 20-day moving average, when the price is overstretched and the market has been overbought, there’s a high probability the market will reverse or pullback, and you will most likely get stopped out.
We all miss entries and opportunities; it is completely normal to do so, and sometimes the market can give you a second chance to enter by coming back to your original level. If it does not and you completely miss the move, do not dwell on it; dust it off and move on. The markets are not going anywhere, and plenty more opportunities will come your way.
You can see in the above image why it is a bad idea to chase missed entries. When the impulsive move has happened and you missed the initial move, leave the market alone at that current time. Either wait for a pullback to trade the continuation, or if your analysis is suggesting a possible market reversal, then wait for a confirmation signal and trade the reversal at a good entry price.
Be Proactive.
Many traders, especially beginners, do not place enough importance on entries when trying to get consistent profits in the markets. The reason why entries are important is due to market noise and the limited funds that traders have. Let me explain further: Traders are buying and selling constantly; therefore, all markets have ups and downs (market noise). This means that markets rarely go up and down in a straight line, so when you put your hard-earned capital at risk in a trade, due to the up and down ticks, your capital will float up and down as the market moves up and down. So if your entry is bad, then you are more likely to get stopped out due to market noise.
If you want to see consistency in your trading, it is crucial to work on your timing and discipline. The best thing you can do to improve the entries in your trades is to be proactive, not reactive.
Being proactive means planning ahead for your trade entry. You must do your homework to anticipate and predict the key levels in the markets to help you get the best entries. Setting up trades after the market closes or during quiet hours is one effective way to be proactive and help improve your entry. You will not second-guess yourself as compared to being a reactive trader because you are prepared. The reactive trader, as the name suggests, reacts to the constant ebb and flow of market prices, always working in "the now." More often than not, reactive traders will end up jumping into momentum plays that will reverse on them, leaving this type of trader frustrated and confused.
Use Limit Orders to improve trade entry.
When using a limit order, you place a limit on how much you're willing to pay to buy or sell a specific product. Limit orders allow traders to enter the market at the best possible price. For example, if you have a specific setup with a good entry level that the market may reach, you can place a limit order at that specific price to buy or sell. Limit orders are very helpful in giving traders the patience and discipline to wait for their entry prices instead of spontaneously entering the market at random levels that will most likely stop them out.
The main disadvantage of a limit order is that there are no guarantees that the order will actually go through. The product price must meet the limit order specifications to execute properly; however, even with this disadvantage, it is still better to have better control by entering at a price you want instead of entering at a price you are not comfortable with.
Support and Resistance levels.
Support and Resistance levels are in the markets for a reason, and you should use them to help with your entries. One of the worst things you could do is think the market is going up and end up buying it at a resistance level before it heads down to stop you out, only for it to go back up again.
Always look at your charts, and get into the habit of looking to the left. Why? Because looking to the left will give you information on historical price movements, and with those movements, you will see consistent areas where the market bounced off (Support) and consistent areas where the market pulled back (Resistance). When you really understand this and grasp how support and resistance levels work, you will instinctively understand these levels and will actually notice the market moving towards them to test them. So the next time you think the market is going up, try to enter near or at a support level, and if you think the market is going down, try to enter near or at a resistance level.
The image above shows support and resistance levels in the market. Can you notice how the market is always drawn to these levels? You can see the numerous times the market has traded around these areas. These areas are often good entry points for your trades, and you should always take the time to look at your charts for these levels.
Use additional timeframes.
Using one or more additional timeframes to double-check a trend can help improve your entries.
For example, if you’re using a four-hour chart as your main timeframe to look for opportunities on a specific product and you spot a pullback from a bull run that has the potential of a big reversal, you could confirm the broader move by taking a look at a daily chart to confirm how long the trend has lasted or identify some support and resistance levels in its wider trend. Alternatively, you could hop over to an hourly chart or 30-minute chart and see what is happening on a smaller timeframe.
By doing this, you can also check whether buyers or sellers are in charge during the current trading period.
What you want to avoid doing, though, is adding too many different charts to your analysis and moving between them at random to find opportunities. Instead, stick to a ‘base chart’ that you use to trade, with one or two others for confirming moves.
As you can see in the image above, there are three charts. On the main time frame, a potential reversal signal was spotted, and there may be a possible pullback to the bull run. By looking at both the longer time frame and the shorter time frame to help support the analysis, this will help improve your entry because, for example, if all timeframes clash with each other or show conflicting signals, this may help the trader second guess their original analysis and may decide to wait for clearer confirmation signs on all time frames before deciding to enter the market.
The goal of every trader is to be successful in achieving consistent profits, and entries play a big part in this. You can correctly call the market and still lose money due to bad entries. The more you understand key market levels and have the discipline to wait and trade around them, the more probability you will have of trades going your way. Though it is still possible to lose trades on good entries, trading is a probabilistic outcome with no guarantees, so why would you want to enter at a bad entry price to give yourself a disadvantage in the markets before the trade has even started?
Trade safely and responsibly.
BluetonaFX
✅ 4 Methods to Confirm EntriesYou should make sure that your reward is bigger than your risk.
It is up to you what your optimal risk to reward should be – ideally you should have a risk to reward of 1:2 or 1:3.
✔️Trendline Reversal & Break
The trader should constantly monitor both the support and resistance trendlines and redraw them as the old ones break and new ones form.
When an intersection of the projections happens, one of the trendlines must be broken and the other will most likely continue to hold the price.
We trade in the direction of the trendline that remained unbroken with potential entries at the trendline breaks.
✔️Support & Resistance
Look at the price chart and observe the support and resistance levels that you have drawn on the charts.
You will look to place sell orders at the resistance levels and buy orders at the support levels.
Stop loss below the support level or above the resistance level depending the call you’re on.
✔️Fibonacci Retracement
Fibonacci retracement levels connect any two points that the trader views as relevant, typically a high point and a low point.
The percentage levels provided are areas where the price could stall or reverse. These levels should not be relied on exclusively,
so it is dangerous to assume that the price will reverse after hitting a specific Fibonacci level.
✔️Consolidations
A price consolidation is a period when the price is moving sideways without any significant advancement in the upward or downward direction. A price consolidation can take any form.
It could be a rectangular pattern (often called a range), any of the different types of triangle patterns, a rising or falling wedge, a pennant, or a flag.
Depending the pattern that takes place, you’re gonna look for entries and stop loss bellow pattern’s invalidation.
👤 @AlgoBuddy
📅 Daily Ideas about market update, psychology & indicators
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Perfect Buy Points: The Power PlayJS-Masterclass #9:
Perfect Buy Points – The Power Play
In the recent tutorials we have some patterns leading to a Perfect Buy Point (Volatility Contraction Patterns, IPO’s – The Primary base).
In this tutorial we will cover the so called Power-Play.
Characteristics of a Power-Play:
1. An explosive price move on huge volume; the stock
shoots up 100% or more in less than 8 weeks.
2. The rapid price run-up could be induced by a major news
development such as an FDA drug approval, litigation
resolution, a new product or service announcement or
even an earnings report, or on no news at all.
3. The stock price then moves sideways in a relatively tight
range not correcting more than 20% over a period of 3-
6 weeks (some emerge after only 10 or 12 days).
Here are some examples:
Special Entry Patterns - IPO'sJS-TechTrading Masterclass : Special Entry Patterns - IPO's
In a previous tutorial, I have explained the general characteristics of a perfect buy point. In this tutorial, we will look at IPO's (Initial Public Offerings) and discuss how to identify primary bases.
IPO's coming out of primary bases can make huge price moves - let's discuss how to find the next monster mover, similar to what stocks like Amazon could achieve after their Initial Public Offering phase.
Perfect Entry Points – IPO’s – The Primary Base
When it comes to investing in IPO stocks, new issues don't play by the usual rules.
Companies making initial public offerings draw a lot of investor attention. That often results in unusual and brand-new chart patterns. Volatility can rise as investors size up demand for the new stock. Yet there are opportunities in these cases, if you can spot the correct characteristics amid the price-and-volume action.
The framework of a good IPO base is simple. The decline from peak to low usually doesn't top 20%, but the most volatile markets have produced declines of up to 50%. The length is often less than five weeks and can be as short as seven days. These two factors alone make IPO bases wayward cousins compared with proper bases, such as the cup with handle and flat base, which need at least five to seven weeks of work.
In an IPO base, the pattern typically starts within 25 days of the stock's first day of trading. Know the important similarities with regular bases. For example, the buy point is drawn by taking the prior high and adding 10 cents. The price gain on the breakout should be strong.
There are ways to evaluate these blind spots, however. Important factors include seeing a shallow correction within the base during normal market conditions, a large increase in price and a close near session highs on the breakout day, and heavy volume on the breakout day and week.
Also, the stock should generally form the base above its IPO price.
Example - ServiceNow (NOW)
The business software company, went public in June 2012, at 18 a share and has built its primary base during the period from the initial offering to April 2013 when the stock developed its first perfect buy point.
JS-Masterclass #6: The Perfect Buy PointThe Perfect Buy Point
A Perfect Buy Point represents the completion of a stock’s consolidation and the potential start of its next advance. After a base pattern has been established, the Perfect Buy Point is where the stock establishes a price level that will act as the trigger to enter a trade.
When a stock’s price level moves through the Perfect Buy Point, there is a high probability that this represents the start of the next advancing phase.
You can also call the Perfect Buy Point a “call to action” price level – it is the optimal buy point.
In the context of a stock’s Volatility Contraction Pattern, a temporary pause (also called a base building process) allows you to set a buy stop to enter a trade. You want to buy as close to thePerfect Buy Point as possible without chasing the stock up more than 1.0%. In this context, the use of buy stop limit orders is recommended.
As a solid consolidation process and the formation of a Volatility Contraction Pattern are needed before a Perfect Buy Point can occur, The Perfect Buy Point can also be considered as the line of least resistance. A stock can move very fast once it crosses this threshold. When a stock breaks through the line of least resistance, the probability is high that the price level will move much higher in a short period of time.
This is the case because this represents an area where supply is low. Therefore, even a small amount of demand can move the stock higher.
The importance of the Volume at the perfect Buy Point
A Volatility Contraction Pattern is needed before a Perfect Buy Point can develop. As explained earlier, supply will stop coming to market at the ed of a valid Volatility Contraction Pattern. This is why we want to see the Volume significantly come down in the day or the couple of days before the Perfect Buy Point develops.
Now, with only very little supply of stock in the market from sellers, even a small amount of buying can move the price up very rapidly as the price level moves through the Perfect Buy Point.
In the ideal case, this move through the perfect Buy Point occurs under heavily increasing volume. This might be an indication that big institutions are putting their big money into the stock.
When all of this comes together, you want to place the order as close to the Perfect Buy Point as possible.
Always wait for the price level to move through the Perfect buy Point!
Some traders will try to get in before the breach of the pivot point to save a few pennies on the trade. Assuming that a stock will break out is dangerous and the breakout may fail. Be patient!
Remember
Even if you respect all these technical requirements of a Perfect Buy Point, you will still get stopped out and incur losses.
BUT: Trading is all about probabilities…respecting these rules will increase your probability to enter profitable trades and significantly outperform other traders and increase your chances to be consistently profitable in the market.
Tutorial On How I Look For Entries/Exits Each Day - ATOMUSD - 1DHello traders,
I meant to publish this in the morning but I got pulled away on something else. It seems my analysis would have been correct, so I'll share this now.
This method is just one of many ways a trader can identify trend direction and entry/exit points at the beginning of each day.
To start...
I identify all patterns and indicator setups that indicate something bearish (the ones in red) or bullish (the ones in green).
I put a +1 tally next to each of them. After identifying all the setups I can, I count the tallies for bullish/bearish bias.
Today, even though the immediate term was looking bullish, there were more bearish signals than bullish ones.
For good measure I then like to do a left to right scan across the chart to see which ones are most prominent to the right (i.e. currently).
I saw the breakdown of the trendline on the right side of the chart, and paired with the bearish signals outnumbering the bullish signals.. I opened a short which was very profitable.
Entries do not matter (Course #3)Entries do not matter (Course #3)
One thing that I have read many times but never believed is, entries do not matter.
After trading a whole lot of different strategies in a repeatable fashion (algo trading), I found that indeed, entries don’t matter.
Of course, if you get in at a bottom for a long or at the top for a short, it feels nice and the entry is absolutely great, because you get the maximum possible outcome in you think about the market played out. This being said, over time, what will make you successful is really a factor of when you exit AND your system overall (covered course #5).
You should not look at the market and hope to get in here and exit there, because the market is not consistent. The market has no rules and no discipline. Instead, you should look at your system and hope to get out when it’s the right time. It is the same in life, look at what you can control - here this is your system, since you can't control the market. READ THIS AGAIN.
In other words, let’s say I always enter at the wrong time, but the price always goes in my direction for at least 0.25% before going the other way. If I can exit on that 0.25%, I will make money!
If my – consistent, disciplined - trading system can get out at 0.25% all the time, it doesn't matter I had a bad entry, because first of all I am not losing money and second, I am making some.
So yes, entries don’t really matter, but exits do.
Look at Crypto Face of Market Cipher. Very often he enters before a pump, because he is good and because his indicator is good as well. You can call this a “good entry”. But sometimes, he does enter and the trades goes against him. Many times I noticed he would not close his trade, and just wait overnight for it to come back. Let’s say the price does come back, and now goes into profit – he exits. What mattered? His exit. If he had exited when the trade was against him, he would have lost money.
In his book “Trade your way to financial freedom”, Van Tharp talks about it and he explains how a random entry system can beat any other system with a specific entry technique.
Whether you are trading algos or manually, you have to understand that it doesn’t matter when you enter. What matters is your system and when you exit.
My #1 profitable algo is designed to never get in at a bottom or a top, for respectively a long or a short trade. Yet, this algo strategy is profitable.
WHAT TYPE OF ENTRIES DO YOU PREFER?Hey, traders, we just wanted to share this as an "Experience" thread, where everybody can share their input on types of entries they make. As depicted in the chart above, there are mainly two types of entries when it comes to patience level and strategy; however, we would totally love to hear your unique ways of executing the trade. Let's learn and earn together!
GBPNZD LIVE EDUCATION ANALYSIS - WATCH AND LEARNWelcome back! Here's a live analysis of this pair!
Please see our previous trade idea that predicted the move for this set up.
COMMENT BELOW and let us know...DID YOU MAKE ANY PIPS FROM THIS SET UP??? :) What questions do you have about the KiSS 2.0 Strategy?
We hope you found this educational idea helpful!
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Brian & Kenya Horton, BK Forex Academy
Entries live examplesHere is an update to my previous idea on entries. I kept rambling on and on so this was too big for an update. Since you can't possibly cover the entire subject even in an entire book, let's go with 2 examples live, not in hindsight. They might (probably maybe even) just fail. Maybe I'll start a new idea with more 3-4 new ones, so we can look at entry + getting stopped (-1R) + trailing + target etc.
Or maybe markets start trending a lot and I'm absorbed and can't be bothered posting. I don't know. Don't have a crystal ball.
I want to update this with 2 live examples, and see how they go (probably both lose)
1-
Here is an example where you only need a 15% winrate to make money.
Price sometimes consolidates, stays within a range, and then goes down, at least often enough to breakeven right?
Oh ye this goes beyond entry but basically before analysing much, the "pattern" or "price action" in itself should at least breakeven, it should have a chance to work.
The risk being limited is what matters, like George Soros with the bank of England, he entered where he was close to "being wrong" (without being greedy trying to enter 5 pips from stop), same with Buffett, he enters when things look bad and could be about to turnaround or it could just be "the end" so he enters close to "being wrong". I don't like the words being wrong because this is not what it is, call it instead "trade invalidated". If I say something happens 20% of the time and it happens 20% of them that does not make me wrong 80% of the time, but rather right 100% of the time.
This is something I did not mention before: as far as I, and everyone who isn't a troll, can tell: the price in sideways is random. So it does not matter where you enter in that area. How dense is it to try to catch the "magical perfect entry" in a RANDOM price action? You don't know where when why the price will go. If there was a magical entry then people could trade these sideways and make money, and to my knowledge the only people that do are retail day traders on the internet.
This is not the best setup, but no setup is ever the best anyway so...
Disclaimer: I am short NZDUSD. Net position will be short EURUSD actually XD
But the EURUSD price action was just bad ye I don't know where to enter so it matters. The NZD isn't looking that bad after all. The EURUSD I think goes down, but chart looks disgusting, no way I can tell where to enter. Random sideways in a small area versus random sideways in a giant area. The different is risk to reward.
Find the tool to express your ideas with the best RR. Now there are some added spreads but it's fine, not like I day trade with a stop 3 times the size of the spreads.
And I might rotate back to being short the NZD, I kind of adapt all the time. If I get stopped on EURNZD and I have no good opportunity to short EURUSD or my opinion of it going down diminishes (it's not binary by the way you have to think in probas), and NZDUSD continues down, well in that case I won't be short EURUSD anymore, and might even increase my NZDUSD size (but only when a pullback happens).
So ye that part is binary for me, and for Warren Buffett too by the way:
Me: No pullback I don't buy
WB: No discount, no PE below 10 (or something) = I don't buy. But I don't care about catching the very bottom or having an exact precise entry.
Since Warren Buffett does it that way, and made billions, I think it's safe to say it's ok to do it that way too, even if he traded "investing" markets and we are talking about "hedging" markets here.
2-
FOMC on the 22. Might have to wait until then, or Monday at least (market could move Monday in anticipation).
Here I think the entry matters :p The number might not (oh yes actually it does) but the date does (or more). Odds of it being a coincidence are really low.
Statistically this has absolutely NOT been a coincidence.
Here I'm supposed to emphasize the "been", and go "past performance does not bla bla bla" I mean... If I have to explain this in the first place... If an "individual investor" needs this explained to them, well this is the wrong job for them. This is so trivial.
Ye, the stupid pattern might repeat itself, I'm willing to risk 1 to make ??? 10? If it keeps going? Past bull markets lasted 1.5 - 4 years so statistically I could make 10 or more.
I don't have any clear stats on this pattern, how often do they repeat themselves, would be too simple, anyone with more than 2 fingers and the ability to spell their name and count to 10 would make money. Which is not everyone, USA universities have "special classes" for "high school graduates" that are illiterate and have a lower math level than ravens.
So... with everyone becoming suprisingly dumb, AND the "dumb money" getting interested in the market... my odds of winning and making money go up.
There is much more to take into account, like the FED manipulating markets.
But here the entry matters. Like when you have something that had 1/65 million odds of happening, you can't ignore it. You could say "hey maybe they created this on purpose to trick people"... That isn't a real thing. By experience it does not happen, again, statistically.
FOMC is the 21-22. FX & commodities should move too once "certainty" comes back. Inch'allah things get moving on the 20 (monday), but either way we should go allelujah on the 22. Praised be Yahweh for making some people smart and some people dumb. And Dionysus if things don't work out.
Risk Management: How to Enter and set SL and TP for an Impulse Risk Management: How to Enter and set SL and TP for an impulse move in the market ?
Hello everyone:
Here is an educational video on how to enter and set SL and potential TP for an impulse move in the market.
I will go over the different entries you can enter to capture the move, and I will also go over Risk Management at the end since it works interrelated with your entries.
3 type of entries to capture an impulse move
(not all of them will happen, but sometimes 1, all, or none)
Reversal: Top/bottom of the continuation structure, candlestick/reversal structure on lower time frame (High Risk, High Reward)
Breakout: Price break out of the continuation structure (Low Risk, Low Reward)
Correction after breakout: Enter in lower time frame (30Min/15Min) continuation correction (Medium Risk, Medium Reward)
Risk Management is important to your entries.
-Your #1 thing is to not lose money. It's not about gaining so much $/% in a month, but learn to control your trades and risk to be successful in the long run.
-15-20 trades per month
-Minimum 3:1 RR on every trade
-Risk 1-2% account per trade
-Understand that, this is my risk management, and how I would approach the market. You would adapt to your own style of trading, and you will then continue to work on this part of the management.
Thank you
Fibonacci Retracement Patterns // Educational ®This is a continuation of my previous published Charts - Check links below...
A portion of Larry Pesavento & Leslie Jouflas work.
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Covering Fibonacci Retracements Entry Patterns;
Fibonacci Retracement Entries;
Fibonacci Retracement Pattern Structure;
Trading The Fibonacci Retracement Pattern;
Risk-Free Trade;
Safe Trades;