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| The Wyckoff Forum Welcome to the Wyckoff trading forum moderated by DbPhoenix and gassah. |
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winnie (05-22-2008) | ||
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Re: Ask Any Wyckoff-Related Question
This may be the logic, DB. Gann (i know it's not Wyckoff), suggested that the majority of overnight orders were placed by non-professionals, the 'pros' would then take advantage of these orders after the opening depending on their view of the market. Maybe part of the reason why Wyckoff dismissed openings in the main is because they were not normally professionally motivated, and also because of the reasons you yourself have given, DB. ? |
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Re: Ask Any Wyckoff-Related Question
Hey Db,
Thanks for your great work in the Wyckoff forum. I am currently in the middle of "The Day Traders Bible" and am curious about the use of the Tape in todays market. Obviously the volume is much higher than it was in the early 1900's, so how could one effectively apply the volume of the tape? Is it a matter of finding out the size the major players tend to trade and filter out the smaller volume with the platform we use? I notice just in the ES alone there is a massive number of trades that are below 10 contracts at a time. I commonly see the turn of the market coming but my timing is off which often results in numerous attempts at the same move. I think the tape might give some clues to help avoid early entries but not sure how to apply it in todays high volume markets. Any advice from yourself in its application today? |
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Re: Ask Any Wyckoff-Related Question
That's pretty much the subject of the entire Forum and my Blog, so a brief answer isn't easy. Whether volume is higher now than then is irrelevant. What matters is the character of the volume wave and how it relates to the price wave, both within the context of support and resistance and trend. And by "wave", I'm not being esoteric. I'm referring to the character of the flows of price and volume (call them oscillations, if you like) rather than focusing on individual bars. See post 3 in the Trend thread.
This can most easily be seen on a chart, though some may be able to see it in a T&S display. |
| The Following User Says Thank You to DbPhoenix For This Useful Post: | ||
JBWTrader (05-28-2008) | ||
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Re: Ask Any Wyckoff-Related Question
Thanks Db,
I read the post you mentioned. From what I understood in your post, do you believe it is more beneficial/easier to read the volume in chart form rather than a T&S display? I have been looking at possibly using the T&S to help see the distribution flow during the wave peaks and troughs. My concern about the volume now as opposed to early 1900 is that there seems to be a lot of orders. The T&S might show 100 orders change hands but only one might be of substantial volume say 150 contracts. The rest might be 1 to 10 contracts at a time. My possible idea for this was to use a platform filter that only shows orders that are say 100 contracts or more. The rest are ignored so I can focus on the big traders at important times. Is this a logical approach or am I missing an important element? Regards, Jay |
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Re: Ask Any Wyckoff-Related Question
Yes, I find charts much easier to use than T&S. When it comes to tape reading, particularly W's approach, one must remember that his book, first published in 1910, provides only part of the answer. Yes, if one is trading only one stock (or, today, one futures contract or one ETF or one whatever), then he can be expected to "keep all of this in his head": support, resistance, the trend, all the minor fluctuations with their accompanying volumes. But to do it for several stocks is beyond the capacity of the average trader. Charts enable him to keep track of all this for n number of whatevers, however many he can handle.
By the time he assembled his course twenty years later, P&F charting was in usage, though I don't know how common it was (it was not codified in book form until around 1933). He used a shorthand-style of P&F on whatever was handy in order to keep track of where prices were going in whatever it was he was watching, thus freeing him from having to "keep all of this in his head". If he'd had a laptop with streaming data that could be plotted on charts, I seriously doubt that he would have left it in his desk drawer. As to orders, what matters is the consummated transaction. However many orders there might be is irrelevant if no deals are closed. People can "intend" to move price up or down until they turn blue, but unless price actually does move up or down, who cares? As to filtering out orders of fewer than 100 contracts, you could give it a try. I can't say whether it would make any difference or not since what matters most is the behavior of price. Later: Those who are interested may find it useful to compare Chapter 8 from the 1910 tape reading material with a similar chapter from the 1932 tape reading course, below. Last edited by DbPhoenix; 05-26-2008 at 03:25 PM. |
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