This is how I see it. Haven't gone through the whole thread yet, but I suspect similar charts have been posted before. Big hinge formed in January/February, which broke out to the downside. The midpoint of the hinge seems to be the starting point of a move up. Since the March low we haven't really seen anything other than higher highs and higher lows. The red supply would indicate than price isn't even overbought. And, as illustrated in your post, the demand line has taken a steeper angle. I'm not sure what all of this means 'in the big picture' but I can't deny the fact that (a) the bulls have regained two thirds of the move down in a relatively short period and (b) the March low looks like a re-test of the selling climax in January, and (c) the downtrend line is broken.
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Regarding the various "upthrusts" and why they didn't make good shorts today, it may help to set aside overhead resistance for the moment and look at the trend, or "stride". |
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The blue rectangle is where I expected some sort of pause, and in fact I believed the upthrust two days ago to be a sign of rejection. That's why the U-turn yesterday came as a relative surprise and got me trading on the wrong side.
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One of the few rules-of-thumb that appear to hold up is that one can't expect one trend day to follow another in the same direction. There has to be a rest of some sort at some point, even if it's only a turn in the opposite direction (e.g., the /\/ pattern we've followed the past three days). |
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Whenever a nice trending day presents itself, I suspect the next day to be more of a ranging one and am cautious about intraday reversals. Lately however, it seems there's only one way of catching the whole range, and that's by leaving at least something of your position on till the end of the day. Yesterday was pretty straightforward imo,
if you got the right entry from the start that is... Red dot is short entry(*).
Price started off in the right direction, but paused immediately. The congestion led to a change in the demand/supply equilibrium, on which price reversed and I stopped myself out for a small loss. I'm still wary of SAR, so I stood aside and waited for a later entry but I don't like taking trades late in the day. I also had +/- 1990 as support.
I've circled a setup from my early days. Upthrust (or a shooting star in candlestick analysis) at potential resistance. High volume too, if you plot it. Doesn't this constitute as a short signal as per VSA? Anyway, demandline not broken, so it's a lower probability trade.
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(*) My actual entry was on the YM, but the principle is the same, I used an NQ chart because that's the instrument you trade.