Matcha's Dow E-mini Journal

Discussion in 'Journals' started by Matcha, May 13, 2010.

  1. NoD - Priceless summation; Great technical review :)
    Matcha - Hang in there sweetie :)
     
    #921     Sep 30, 2010
  2. NoDoji

    NoDoji

    I think you are evaluating too many things and missing the context as a result.

    Remove everything from your chart except the price bars. The 20-bar MA is optional, because you can draw or visualize trend lines instead.

    Keep a 1-min chart for cross-reference if you want. This is also very optional and not really necessary. A 1-min chart can help you see internal double tops and double bottoms a bit more clearly at times, and you can see the price waves inside large/whippy/spiky 5-min bars when the price action's sloppy. Sloppy price action is usually the signal to sit on hands, but it can occasionally present a good opportunity when viewed through the microscope of the 1-min chart.

    Now with only price bars in front of you and a 20 EMA or a couple simple trend lines, you have everything you need.
     
    #922     Sep 30, 2010
  3. Matcha

    For a 20 bar ema to generate a true reading at the opening bell we need the 20 bars prior to the 930 bar... I noticed this on your 9-24-10 chart (seemed way out of whack). I always want to scroll your charts to the left and see what's back there!! Here's a chart of today (9-30) for a comparison. I know your vwap begins at the open (and I have issues with that too) but other indicators that generate signals need the prior data to calculate the averages they use. When I look at your charts, prior to the opening session line there always appears to be missing bars. These are important especially when 830 news generates a large group of high "volume" bars. One more point the 20ma on my chart is 20 bars EMA "close".
     
    #923     Oct 1, 2010
  4. LOL... sounds like an infomercial... that you need a drug called "Reducon" to reduce your confusions... :)

    I think you are dealing with many different approaches to trading the market. Each approach has merit in its own right. But different approaches may have different interpretations given the same set of data, at the same time. Especially when you try to employ different approaches in different time-frames. That makes things worse.

    I think you should pick one or two approaches as your "core" methodology. Then you use all others as secondary/supporting 'opinions", for taking side or for timing.
     
    #924     Oct 1, 2010
  5. ~~~

    ~~~

    sweetie ... you have to understand ... "the context' is all the big daredevils who are in the market and they'll do all kind of crazy stunts to hit their targets ... sometimes the 'context' is just an "illusion" but doesn't really reflect the actual "context"/market common sense/market environment ... sometimes you'll see the px keeps dropping lower & lower amd lower hardly or very little retracement they continue selling hard when the good news came out... just when you're convinced that the market is "berish" then they flip-over ... started buying & buying pushing the px keeps going higher & higher ... so you are caught in between ... bleeding!

    To be a trader you have to be an incredible strong person who will not get a heart-attack when the market/context moves without 'logic"... swing both ways wildly!! As a daytrader you must understand the psycology/behavior of the big daredevils ... follow them not against them ... your chances of making $$$$ is high then.
     
    #925     Oct 1, 2010
  6. ~~~

    ~~~

    Great advice Boli... Matcha u should pick One or two as your "core" methodology! :) and when you're confused don't know what to do? ... just don't trade on that day .. take a break & go out dancing or shopping .. do something fun to make yourself happy. :)
     
    #926     Oct 1, 2010
  7. ~~~

    ~~~

    lately so many moody traders ... now for all the engineers aka love-sick puppies to see all my sweetie sisters including Matcha here :D hopefully it helps them to trade with happy hearts LOL :D
    coz a happy person produces happy result/good result LOL:D

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4omJYC7eIko


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNptfSg1gCI
     
    #927     Oct 1, 2010
  8. ~~~

    ~~~

    oops..sorry ... should be 'bearish' Not 'berish' & should be "psychology' Not 'psycology':eek: my typing skill is terrible and my english is horrible :eek: the only thing i am doing ok is trading
    ... thanks God!:p
     
    #928     Oct 1, 2010
  9. ~~~ - You know markets are most commonly irrational which is what really vexes serious traders who must overlay rationality on chaos to make a profit. Hence moodiness. Your sweet sisters make rational men (engineers or not) dream. Your wisdom (beyond markets) is really about balance. Good advice for all :)
     
    #929     Oct 1, 2010
  10. Matcha

    Matcha

    No quality price action today. All choppy. The only small trending moment was in doldrums.

    I watched the price action tick by tick this morning. I didn’t take any action. Took 2 trades in the late session. Both were stopped out. The price action is just too indecisive.

    First trade:
    11:26am. short 10766, Stop out 10772, short at range high, double top.
    11:31am. Flip to long 10773, stop out 10768, long at pivot point. Held through all the D/B retest, breakout. Thought to hold longer for at least a retest Today’s high. But it came right back hit the stop.


    Today’s PnL: -$60 2 trades

    Weekly recap:
    PnL: -$437.
    #of trades per day:5
    Winrate: 26%

    Very embarrassed!:(

    Wentfishing, I am showing the chart with part of overnight reaction today.
    [​IMG]
     
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    #930     Oct 1, 2010