How many of you (small timeframe) traders take PA into account?

Discussion in 'Trading' started by halfwaythere, May 16, 2015.

Is PA a major deciding factor for you when placing a trade?

  1. Yes

    28 vote(s)
    87.5%
  2. No

    4 vote(s)
    12.5%
  1. I don't disagree. surf
     
    #11     May 16, 2015
  2. Handle123

    Handle123

    Candlesticks don't test well on one minute timeframe I generally trade so I don't know if they work on larger timeframes. Some of my signals are bounces off trend lines and some are waiting for breakout/retrace in direction of new trend and some are pure breakouts of certain Price Patterns. I started long ago using weekly timeframe for long term and still do, but when price is near longer timeframes S&R, definitely not go against trend and will take profit earlier, if I am wrong, they not going to take profit out of the account and there be other trades on other side, not chasing anything.

    Price moves first then it is written about after and when there is no reason, "Profit taking" is given. I have news, there is Profit taking and losing on each trade.
     
    #12     May 16, 2015
  3. dbphoenix

    dbphoenix

    To the OP:

    Just out of curiosity, you've been at this for at least three years and appear to have been trading -- successfully -- the TF during that time. Are you no longer trading profitably?
     
    #13     May 16, 2015
  4. Redneck

    Redneck

    Trying to trade those small of TFs - would make my eyes bleed..., send me into incessant bouts of cussing / convulsions / foaming at the mouth / soiling my drawers

    But..., so long as its working for Ya - its all good


    1.) Candlestick is a type of chart - as is a bar (o/h/l/c) chart - or a line chart..., or any other numerous chart types

    Pick which ever fits your eye the best


    2.) PA - most definitely - price / price movement is what we trade

    3.) Price behavior is exactly what we're trying to glean / decipher / exploit

    4.) It not about what we deem important (that is purely subjective..., and of no use) - it only about what PA deems important - and "potentially" has deemed important in the past

    This is where gleaning / deciphering price's behavior (past and present) is important - and why spending time in front of a live chart is a must

    It also helps.., greatly..., to understand the various players - their roles - their limitations - their foot prints - their typical way of trading - when they are..., and are not present

    This last is a puzzle you'll need to piece together - hard..., but doable


    Many ways to become a successful trader - but for the independent manual trader (the classification most of us fall under)

    Yes..., absolutely crucial


    Hours..., days..., weeks..., months - upon hours..., days..., weeks..., months - watching a live chart

    To a much lessor extent - from books reading about PA concepts (but this no where is enough - need to be in front of a live screen)

    One also needs to see / experience / survive - the various cycles..., the various PA environments


    Successful Journey Sir

    RN
     
    #14     May 17, 2015
    SMA, Alpha Trader and VPhantom like this.
  5. KISS: keep it simple stupid o_O

    the only thing a trader needs to know is: The trend is your Friend.
    (everything else is just noise and nonsense, in my opinion)
     
    #15     May 17, 2015
    athlonmank8 likes this.
  6. PA is the only thing that makes sense on any time frame, IMO.
     
    #16     May 17, 2015
  7. Turveyd

    Turveyd

    Get it down to enter with current direction, when there is enough momo for the direction to likely continue and avoid chop, thats when you can get consistent.
     
    #17     May 17, 2015
  8. Turveyd

    Turveyd

    Yes as long as we arent talking candle stick patterns, there made up crap.

    If we are talking watching just a bid line, totally blank chart other than that and how it's moving, looking at live buying /selling pressure than totally.
     
    #18     May 17, 2015
  9. Candlestick patterns is one of those things I will probably never understand. LOL. From my experience, candlesticks causes one to focus too much on how bars close and other nonsense instead of focusing on zones of support and resistance. They (candlesticks) look good for show, but I prefer bar charts for actual analysis.
     
    #19     May 17, 2015
  10. Turveyd

    Turveyd

    I'm more of a scalper, so i read the ticks really, but try to only trade with the current momo.

    Most of the time market direction holds so get very few losers, mostly small profits but profit is profit :)
     
    #20     May 17, 2015