That’s pretty cool. I’m a fan of Gann, been playing with Gannzilla and the longer astronomy cycles. Mostly see the So9 and fans around. This is the first of this type of interpretation.
Very astute gentleman by the name of Bradley Cowan took Gann's teaching to the next level. His books are on Amazon..I think
The most efficient method of trading just don't trade rather buy and hold from birth - sorta serious.
I agree, such glitches should not last very long, which means you are unlikely to capture them manually. I guess except something very thinly traded. @stewbacca , what speed is needed to take advantage of open/close auctions, for example?
I dont think in todays markets these "glitches" are a thing for at home traders. i cant say for sure but my bet is unless you're a sophisticated firm with state of the art tech and brain power you're out of this game.
I am definately not a fan of this guy but I have to admit he makes a very solid point in this video about why 95% of traders are losers.Basically they latch on to a losing strategy and are too dumb to realize it.
i recall somebody on ET was trading smallcap mining stocks on the vancouver exchange. I imagine there's some low liquidity over there. I think he was watching for big moves in large/well known mining stocks and then buying the small cap if it did not follow suit on a timely basis. any market with low liquidity/efficiency will have 'glitchy' opportunities. Question is, how easy is it to source opportunities and then scale it? Kindof like buying mispriced antiques at estate sales and selling it on ebay for 5x.
Granted it was a lot easier 20 years ago before the algos have fully infested the markets, but there are still opportunities out there, especially when volatility spikes