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The
swing trader faces a considerable challenge mastering the puzzle
of market movement. While most of us recognize conflict and
resolution within the price chart, we fail to utilize these
dependable mechanics in our
trading
strategies. Fortunately, repeating elements of the
charting landscape offer a powerful context to understand and
manage these vital aspects of trend development. Through
repeating dynamics of crowd behavior, price action tends to
mimic classic rules that modern scientists apply to our physical
universe.
This is probably no accident of nature. Emotion and
mathematics interact continuously while they draw
the Fibonacci retracements that we see every day
through our chart analysis. This fascinating
relationship offers a glimpse into the profound
order beneath common price movement. At its core,
convergence-divergence between these two forces
helps us to understand and trade the market swing.
For example, we may search the chart for a reversal
or breakout pattern that spells opportunity, but we
also watch the ticker tape to gauge the crowd's
emotional intensity, and to predict where it will
burn out or shift gears.
Successful traders
draw intuitively
upon these bilateral
market mechanics as
they master the art
of speculation.
Their advanced
skills correspond
with the peculiar
logic required to
unify left and right
brain functions into
a focused trading
methodology. Perhaps
future technicians
will quantify these
profound
interactions between
herd behavior and
physical law, and
even open up a new
branch of technical
price prediction. In
the meantime, let's
explore some primary
characteristics of
these underlying
market physics
1. AN OBJECT IN MOTION TENDS
TO REMAIN IN MOTION
New trends awaken within the
low volatility of a
rangebound market and are
characterized by directional
price momentum. During the
early phases of new trends,
volatility rises but inertia
tends to slow down price
rate of change. This often
generates a series of tests
or congestion mini-patterns
while price tries to escape
the influence of the old
range. Eventually, momentum
overcomes inertia and price
movement takes on a more
vertical appearance. This
freedom of motion actually
lowers volatility as
friction eases and a
one-sided market assumes
control.
New trends can be very
difficult to stop once they
are underway. As with other
objects in motion, trends
feed on themselves because
they draw in fresh energy
(from cash and emotions on
the sidelines). This induces
price movement to travel
well beyond arbitrary
barriers, such as targets
set by outside forces. But
no trend can last forever or
travel to infinity. Just
like its physical
counterpart, intervening
market force will eventually
stop or reverse directional
price movement.
Simple friction slows down a
rolling ball. Active trends
experience friction in the
form of market gravity.
Classic trading wisdom notes
that rallies take buyers,
but that markets will "fall
from their own weight" under
the right circumstances.
Unfortunately, the dynamics
of this well-understood
mechanism don't quite match
those of Mother Earth. If
they did, all markets would
fall to zero as soon as
buying and selling dried up.
The fact that markets retain
value suggests that each one
has a hidden center of
gravity that price
development will reach if
all participants step aside
at the same time. This
"central tendency" gently
pulls market movement toward
a hidden mean during quiet
times, but can act with
shocking intensity when
price action generates
strong imbalances during
extreme market conditions.
The distance from the
current price bar to this
elusive value quantifies a
level of market inefficiency
at each point in time. It
also defines most
opportunity for the
swing
trader.
Bollinger Bands present a
common tool to measure
tension on this hidden
spring. But other indicators
that rely upon deviation
from the mean perform an
adequate job as well. And
don't overlook simple chart
patterns. Certain formations
can reveal major
inefficiency through a
simple set of price bars.
For example, a Shooting Star
candle after a strong rally
signals an invisible wall to
the observant speculator.
The Pull of Central
Tendency: Combine
candlestick patterns
and Bollinger Band
extremes to uncover
hidden friction that
will stop or reverse
a strong market
trend. Note how
Immunex pierces the
top band on July
19th, but closes
back within its
boundaries in a tall
Shooting Star
candle.
2. FOR EVERY ACTION, THERE
IS AN EQUAL AND OPPOSITE
REACTION
Traders at all levels must
deal with the wavelike
motion on price charts.
These define underlying
cycles that strategies must
align with, or risk failure.
At their core, these waves
reflect constant battles
between bulls and bears, and
the underlying trend-range
axis. Price thrusts forward
in a surge of participation
but then pauses to test
prior boundaries and
dissipate volatility. Price
bars contract, volume drops
significantly, and the trend
pulls against its primary
direction. But just as that
market returns to a stable
state, the action-reaction
cycle suddenly regenerates
and volatility surges. Fresh
momentum carries the
reawakened trend toward a
new price level, or reverses
it back toward its origins.
But why aren't markets stuck
between two horizontal
extremes if trend and
countertrend act with equal
force, and are polar
opposites? The answer lies
in how active markets
dissipate directional force.
Every buyer must eventually
sell and every short seller
must eventually cover. This
induces layers of cycles
that equalize price action
and reaction over time.
Swing traders observe this
dynamic process in the trend
relativity of different
length charts for the same
trading instrument. In other
words, a single market may
print a strong rally on the
daily chart, a bear market
on the 60-minute chart, and
sideways congestion on the
5-minute chart, all at the
same time. While this
phasing process may seem
chaotic, it actually
reflects the dissipation of
underlying action-reaction
polarity. This 3-D
trend-range axis also
carries an added benefit:
its alignment generates many
of the setups in the swing
trader's playbook.
Locate these important
opportunities in the
convergence of specific
action-reaction imbalances
through several layers of
price activity. This logical
analysis also supports the
contrary attitude that leads
to successful
swing
trading. For
example, while the crowd
sees a buying opportunity
when price surges on heavy
participation, the swing
trader sees selling power
increasing in that market
due to the entrance of a new
crowd of buyers. Fortunes
are made through this type
of counterintuitive logic,
generated by recognition of
the underlying power in
market physics.
Time Frame
Divergence: Price
action in 3 time
frames generates
different
support-resistance
considerations while
Qualcomm tries to
halt a sharp
decline. The daily
chart prints a
hammer reversal near
a 6-month low. The
60-minute chart
shows a bearish
pullback into an
ugly down gap, while
the 5-minute chart
offers
short-term
traders
excellent profits
through a midday
bounce near whole
number 50.
3. THE STAR THAT BURNS
BRIGHTEST BURNS OUT FASTER
THAN THE STAR THAT EMITS A
COOLER, DARKER LIGHT
We measure the health of a
rally or weakness of a
selloff by the angle of its
rise or fall. Common sense
dictates that more vertical
price bars reflect more
powerful price moves. But
how does the intensity of
price change interact with
the persistence of the trend
itself? To answer this
question, we can rely upon
the characteristics of
central tendency discussed
earlier. If each market
carries an underlying fair
value at each point in time,
a dynamic move should reach
that price in less time
(fewer bars) than a slow
hike in the same direction.
In other words, vertical
trend bars should burn out
and end their movement much
sooner than slower trend
bars.
Unfortunately these angles
of inclination and
declination are relative to
the observer. Low price
distorts movement on
arithmetic charts. A
spectrum of growth rates
distorts movement on log
charts. So before we can
objectively measure how
bright our market star
burns, we need to adopt a
common system of viewing
price change. Unfortunately
this is more difficult than
it first appears. Diverse
charting types and methods
force us to apply
measurements that are often
dependent upon the software
or service that we use. The
most fruitful analysis
adopts a common view across
an entire database, so that
visual comparison of trend
intensity has a point of
reference. Then we can use
our eyes and simple standard
deviation to examine the
duration and stability of
price change.
Apply this charting method
to locate parabolas that are
ripe for strong reversals.
In the contrary view of the
swing trader, vertical price
movement is seen as a
prelude to a reaction of the
same intensity in the
opposite direction. Just as
a supernova signals the
imminent demise of an aging
star, the parabola informs
the market that its trend
fuel is about to run out,
and likely cause a violent
reaction. First set a fixed
log chart percentage between
15% and 20%. Then scan the
entire database for issues
with the steepest angles of
short-term price change.
Isolate those markets with
the tallest price bars and
visible trends in excess of
45 degrees. Then reset the
log scale to automatic for
these filtered issues, so
that recent price action
fills the screen. Apply a
standard Bollinger Band and
look for bars that print
well outside the upper or
lower band. Find your fade
entry level by dropping down
to a lower time frame and
locating a small-scale
reversal pattern that aligns
well with broader landscape
features.
A trend that moves at a very
shallow angle also predicts
its own demise, but for
different reasons. This
reversal follows the
mechanics of the rising or
falling wedge patterns seen
on many price charts. Both
traders and investors want
excitement in their lives.
They buy or sell so they can
watch price ramp to new
levels. Shallow trends never
fulfill this need for
gratification. For example,
participants watch price
rise in an uptrend to a
marginal new high over and
over again, but never gather
enough momentum to
accelerate the rate of
ascent. Shareholders
eventually lose interest in
this type of price action
and jump ship in search of a
more exciting trading
vehicle. The market loses
broad sponsorship and
finally drops off a cliff.
Locating Blowoffs:
Skilled eyes uncover
the most dynamic
parabolic trends and
then execute fading
strategies at
natural reversal
levels. Start with a
fixed log chart
setting, such as the
15% in figure A.
Scan your database
quickly and locate
the most vertical
price movement that
you can find, up or
down. Return to a
more comfortable
chart scale (figure
B) and apply 3-D
charting landscape
techniques to
identify low-risk
entry.
4. ENERGY SOURCES LEAVE
TELLTALE SIGNATURES IN THE
FORM OF EXHAUST OR RADIATION
This classic principle of
physics requires little
translation for the
financial markets. Real
trading opportunities look
like opportunities because
they emit characteristics of
impending directional price
movement. This reveals
itself in crowd
participation, price action
at known boundaries, the
creation of recurring price
patterns, and the
convergence of technical
indicators. Interpret these
diverse market signatures
correctly and book
consistent profits as a
swing trader.
Engineers build machinery to
investigate exhaust
emissions and measure their
internal characteristics.
For example, a hose attached
to a vehicle's exhaust pipe
tells the auto mechanic the
current condition of the
internal machinery. Swing
traders build similar
measurement tools to
evaluate the state of
internal market activity.
But just as the engineer
designs instruments to
examine a very narrow range
of physical information,
swing traders must limit
data intake to specific
market characteristics and
filter out many noise levels
that can defeat profits.
Chart patterns with true
predictive power emit
evidence that these market
engineers can detect and
measure. The radiation of
opportunity builds through
convergence of diverse
elements at narrow
intersections of price and
time. Each independent
signal drawn into this small
space raises the odds that a
trade setup will produce a
valid result. Heat builds
strongly at these important
levels and tells the swing
trader to get on board
quickly.
Reading the Charting
Landscape: Highly
predictive charts
print well-organized
patterns at expected
price levels. AMCC
starts with an
Island Reversal (1)
that ends a clear
Elliott 5-Wave (2)
rally. Price drops
under the
intermediate high at
48 and the 62%
retracement (3) of
the prior move. Weak
congestion (4) forms
under the
retracement level.
The bottom Bollinger
Band (5) expands
downward, opening
the door to falling
price. All signs
points to an
impending first
failure event (6),
in which price will
retrace 100% or more
of a prior trend
leg. The swing
trader measures this
evidence, sells
short into the
congestion, and
waits for the
pattern to work out
the expected result.
CONCLUSION
Modern traders have great
difficulty organizing market
movement into a manageable
feedback and execution
system. Too often, they
ignore important chart data
because it doesn't fit into
a convenient system of
horizontal price boundaries.
This obsession with
simple-minded pattern
recognition exposes a
trader's inability to grasp
the more powerful mechanics
of price prediction.
Unfortunately, concentrating
on a narrow execution
strategy is like trying to
play music with a single
note. It works only when a
fleeting moment of
opportunity demands a
single, flat tone.
Expand your trading
knowledge through the
application of market
physics. Each new aspect
expands your ability to
profit from subtle aspects
of crowd behavior. Keep in
mind that these natural
forces rely upon mechanics
that many speculators will
overlook. This lets you gain
an important edge on the
path to successful trading.
It might take a lifetime to
explore these complex
interactions between
evolving price and the
emotional crowd. But each
piece of this fascinating
puzzle adds new levels of
empowerment to
trading
performance.
The swing trader faces a
considerable challenge mastering the
puzzle of market movement. While
most of us recognize conflict and
resolution within the price chart,
we fail to utilize these dependable
mechanics in our
trading
strategies.
Fortunately, repeating elements of
the charting landscape offer a
powerful context to understand and
manage these vital aspects of trend
development. Through repeating
dynamics of crowd behavior, price
action tends to mimic classic rules
that modern scientists apply to our
physical universe.