Friday, 2 November 2012

FTSE Premarket Review 2012-11-02



The FTSE retraced the previous days move yesterday and bounced at the 100% fib.  Seems like a pretty bulish move.  Slow start to this morning so expecting a bit of a retracement.  Also NFP today so probably not a great deal of action until then.

Levels to watch:

5908-10
5866
5830-32
5819

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Trading - Your Inner Dialogue

Read some good tweets from @trader_dante today regarding the thought processes of a trader which I thought would be good to record for the future.  He was talking about the inner (and outer) dialogue he has with himself when considering a trade.

"One trader sees a breakout and understands that is technically "bullish" and takes the trade. Another trader is asking questions...


  1. How far has price already travelled today? 
  2. How does that compare to an average day? 
  3. Why might today be any different?
  4. Has price broken enough to take the buy stops? 
  5. Are those buy stops shorts puking or longs initiating?
  6. Have retest traders using buy limits had a chance to get onboard on any timeframe? 
  7. Where will shorts puke? 
  8. Where will longs target?
  9. What's the bigger picture telling us? 
  10. Is price behaviour confirming my opinion which is based on the net result of my understanding?
So I take entries with more confidence when my understanding is deemed to be right by the price action."



Thursday, 18 October 2012

FTSE Premarket Review 2012-11-19


FTSE looking bearish today, hitting the top of the bear flag shown.  I will look for opportunities to get short until the top of the bear flag is broken.

Decent area from 5980-90 to look to target if I can get a short on.

Alternatively the DAX is approaching the bottom of a bull channel, if this bounces we could see the FTSE break the flag and I will look for a retest of the top of the flag to get long.

Result

The market false broke the top of the flag and then tanked on bad news (google results i think).


Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Drawing Effective Support and Resistance

I thought I would jot down a few ideas I have regarding effective support and resistance levels on chart that seem to have worked for me.

Firstly a definition for anyone who has arrived here and is not familiar with support and resistance can be found over here.

  • Strength is defined by the number of touches and the reaction off the level
  • More recent swing levels are more relevant
  • Important levels should be marked on higher time frames, weekly and daily work for me
  • Beware of marking levels that price has previously not respected
  • Bias the level relative to the current price, eg. if price is above the level it maybe possible to bias that level to when it has previously acted as resistance and vice versa when the price is below I try to bias the level to represent previous support.  This is because I like to trade breakout re-tests of these levels.
  • Review levels on my charts once per week, remove any levels not being respected and tweak weekly and hourly levels


Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Time for a trading plan

Right, last weeks performance was poor to say the least, it's time to pull together all the wishy washy ideas of a trading plan I have had going round in my head and get them down (and stick to them).  This is partly inspired by Simon Massey over at ftseday and by The Disciplined Trader by Mark Douglas which I have just finished reading (and will read again).

Firstly the acceptance:  I fully understand that the poor performance last week was in stark contrast to the previous 2 weeks because of poor self discipline (influenced by emotion), bad cash management (risked more than I should have) and over trading mediocre and invalid setups.

Rules of the trade
I WILL…
  • Only trade valid setups (imagine I have to justify every trade to a pro trader)
  • I will risk X% of my account on each trade
  • Take full or partial profit at +X pips
  • Stop trading for the day when I have hit my target
  • Cut trades when the reason for entry is invalidated
  • Get up at 6:30 every trading day to evaluate the pre market action and prepare for the open
  • Stop trading for the day after 2 full losses
  • Be aware of my emotions particularly "REVENGE", "im going to miss out" and "I hope this turns around"
  • Record every trade I make with notes and suggestions
  • Learn from my mistakes by reviewing my trading log weekly/monthly
  • Help as much as I can and continually learn and improve my knowledge of markets and psychology
  • Run over these rules everyday
  • Make sure I have time for my family outside of work and trading
I WILL NOT…
  • Listen to the emotions above
  • Look for reasons to stay in a trade that s going against me
  • Trade around important news releases and the US open
  • Leave trades open overnight
  • Take trades I cant be around to monitor continually
  • Pay attention to anyone elses opinion on the market
Taking losses
I will cut losses quickly when the trade is invalidated.  Once open trades should be managed on the lower time frame chart, I will identify areas that if broken will result in order flow against me and get out at or before those areas.
After a loss I will review my emotional state.  Do I need to relax and cool down?  Do I feel tense or agitated?  If so then I will take steps to resolve this.  Breathe and review the trade, I will not trade until balanced again.  Was that trade a fair set up?  Did I manage it professionally?  A loss is only that, its part of the business and part of learning.  I will learn from these trades and move on.


I have removed some of the details in the plan as my tolerance for risk my differ to other people and my set ups are unique to my experience.

Monday, 20 February 2012

Trading rooms

Great post from Robert Sweetman regarding the day trading room at ftseday.  Well worth a read as it worked for me after spending years reading trading books and trying every strategy under the sun.

It's still really hard work to get control over your emotions but just watching other traders work helps massively.  The fact the everyone is helpful and supportive is priceless.

Just don't mention indicators...

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Options expiry

I wasn't going to trade today (17/2/12) because I already made 25% on my account this week and it was options expiry which I have been told is trickier to trade than a normal day due to big players moving prices.  When the price came back down to the double bottom around 11ish I couldn't resist grabbing a few points as the R:R was really good.  Got out for +8 just before the price took off, should have held onto this trade but thought the price was stalling.

Tried to short off the 20 level in the afternoon, got my stop to b/e and got stopped out shortly afterwards again just before the price tanked.  Resisted chasing the trade.

Looking forward to Monday as I think we might see the FTSE breakout of the range it's been in for the last couple of weeks.