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  1. Hi kuokam, Sorry for the delayed response. I was in the process of putting together a post about high/low confidence and assessing which time frame is dominating the market, and the post was getting long and I was getting tired writing. So I thought it would be better, if we had a discussion. Do you want to join me in Skype some time so that we can discuss this? I will answer any questions you have about using Market Profile. Otherwise, you can take a look at this post I made a while back, but I could go into more detail in a live discussion. http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/market-profile/6605-trading-market-profile-2.html#post73945 Feel free to PM me.
  2. Hi Kuokam, You did well with your responses. Please note that you do not need to know Market Profile in order to answer these questions. The one question I would like you to think more about is, "how do short-term or day traders trade?" I would also like you to be a little more specific about the signs of long-term traders in the market. The key here is to get into the heads of your competitors, which is a requirement IMO, in order to differentiate between a market that is being dominated by shorter term traders vs longer term traders. I will provide a longer response later this weekend when I have a little more time. But I will leave you with this, IMO, if you can develop the following 2 trader skills, I think you are well on your way to being a very profitable trader. The rub? These are arguably the most difficult things to do in trading, requiring quite a bit of experience to do it consistently well. You will never be perfect, but to make money in the markets, you don't have to be perfect. As traders, we continue to evolve and get better, but never perfect. There is more to trading than this, but these are key, because the answer to these questions get down to the basics of what moves a market. Determine who is dominating the market. (This is what this post is about.) Determine if there is an inventory imbalance.
  3. Hi Kuokam, Let me ask you some questions first... What does a high confidence market look like to you? What does a low confidence market look like to you? If short-term traders are dominating the market, is that high or low confidence? If longer term traders are dominating the market, is that high or low confidence? What are signs of short-term traders in the market? If you're a short-term trader, than how do you trade? What are signs of long-term traders in the market? I've talked about this in my other posts, so you can find some of these answers there. There is also information in the quote you referenced above.
  4. MP is simply a graphic that depicts the 2-way auction process. It is a bell curve (i.e., a distribution) that is used to organize the market data just like it is done in other disciplines. As such, MP allows us to gather market-generated information to help us interpret market behavior. MP is a tool - nothing more, nothing less - in your trading arsenal, but successful trading requires more than that. isamel, the way you asked your question leads me to believe that you may be looking for exact rules for determining the participation of the various timeframes in the market from daily profiles alone. It's not that simple. You need to consider the longer timeframe charts, such as daily, weekly, and monthly, you need to consider market condition and trade location, and you need to consider market confidence like I alluded to in my previous post. With respect to the daily profiles themselves, you need to consider attempted direction, volume, value area placement and profile shape. And finally, just observe how the market is trading. This is where you develop experience reading the market. The market gives a lot of clues, if you're paying attention, but trading is still hard. There will always be ambiguity that creates doubt, but that is what creates opportunity. In short, you need to consider CONTEXT. Let me give you an example of the type of complexity I am talking about. With respect to the profile graphic, what is the profile shape on a trend day where the longer timeframe may be involved? In general, the profile shape is thin and elongated. So does this mean that if we have an elongated profile that the OTF is dominating? No, it doesn't. If you have a profile that is elongated but too stretched out with multiple distributions and a lot of single prints, that is usually a sign of panic'd buying or selling - short-term traders. The longer timeframe doesn't trade this way. They like to see "backing and filling" so that they don't raise the prices on themselves, if buying, or lower the prices on themselves, if selling. So what does this portend for future trading sessions? A stretched out profile is considered "poor structure" and it is likely that the market will have to trade through that area again before the market can trade with confidence in a given direction. It doesn't have to happen on that day or even the following day. But that becomes background information (context) that you should not forget about. Also, when we trade through a stretched out profile, think about how swift the market may trade through it without any support or resistance. This is the informational edge that MP can provide. While most people see strength on a day like that, you're prepared for the opposite.
  5. isamel, you're correct about the TPO count being used as a way to track inventory imbalances in the short-term (usually by the locals) when a market is balancing. TPO count is not as useful anymore, I don't know any traders that use it even though some Market Profile software still track it. Personally, I would learn the concept and move on. But identifying inventory imbalances is extremely useful in trading. Unfortunately, it takes a lot of time to learn and can get quite complicated since you can have inventory imbalances in different timeframes. Regarding value, if the market opens above the previous day's value area, for example, and let's say 3 brackets or so have occurred above yesterday's value area, the odds are pretty good that the current day's value is going to be higher or overlapping-to-higher. If you trade value, you would probably be more aggressive on the long side. Your goal as a trader should be to assess the odds of certain things happening and then trading accordingly. Does value have to be higher on such a day? Not necessarily, the market could tank, but the more brackets we spend above yesterday's value area, the harder it gets to get unchange, overlapping-to-lower, or lower value. If it changes than we adjust our view of the market. You can also have a gap higher open, and the market auctions lower all day, but value is higher. What does that mean? That usually means that short-term the market is bearish, but longer term the market is bullish because the market is well bid, as they say. That is, if the market was truly weak, value would not be higher, buyers are still supporting the market, but perhaps the market got too long and needs to break before it moves higher (i.e., inventory imbalance). Learn to estimate value from the opening bell - very useful. You can do a similar thing with day types, but don't get too hung up on the day type labels. Remember, the day types are used to determine whether the market is exhibiting high or low confidence. The labels are useful for learning about MP, but once you learn it you should really start thinking in terms of degrees of confidence. The same applies to opening types. Opening types really address the confidence in the market. This IS the point of day types and opening types. For example, on a trend day, the odds are low that we will revisit the opening price late in the day. can it happen? Sure, but remember, we're talking odds since no one can predict the market. As you can tell, the confidence level in the market is very important for determining trading tactics, at least for me. A high confidence open usually indicates the OTF in the market - fade less or not at all. A low confidence market usually indicates short-term traders in control - don't go for home runs. Discerning the dominant timeframe in the market is as important as it gets, IMO. Longer timeframes behave differently than shorter timeframes. Day traders love short-term references, like previous day's high/low. overnight high/low, opening, settlement price, etc. The longer term couldn't care less about those levels. They don't wait for markets to trade to these levels before buying or selling. Why? Because they can't afford to, they have too much business to transact when they're active. If you see the market trading through the open several times and to these exact levels and then reversing, that is a clue that the short timeframe is dominating. Sorry, I could go on, but I'll leave it here.
  6. You nailed it! Playing the odds is what profitable trading is all about. Most traders can't get past the current trade and try to do whatever it takes not to lose, which may develop bad habits for future trades. Having an edge and putting the odds in your favor is how professional traders survive the long-run (i.e., thousands of trades) and that's all that matters - not today and not the current trade. Profitable traders play the odds because they can't predict or control the markets.
  7. Oh, and here is the 2008 market free-fall when the credit crisis hit. Sorry, I couldn't resist. [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHBuKmyhbtQ&feature=related]Hardest song on piano ever! (Circus Galop) - YouTube[/ame]
  8. Thanks for playing $5DAW, but I see it a little differently than you do. This piece (Appassionata) is very fast and starts off with momentum and a high confidence opening like an open-drive. Entries are difficult, if you're waiting for a pullback. A minute into it the tempo is still quite fast! This market is one-timeframing higher (or lower, but let's assume higher) and this is showing signs of being a strong trend day. Most traders will wait for a pullback or pause for entry, but an aggressive entry would be to just get long while the market is trending higher early in the day and volume is still increasing, and then monitor for continuation, but most traders won't do this. Believe it or not, the risk is actually lower if you try to catch a trend move early on increasing volume, but it is counter-intuitive to most. But let's assume that you don't initiate a trade this way because it doesn't suit your style, that's fine. So where can we initiate a trade with a more conservative entry? Well, let's wait for the pullback or pause. And what do you know, as fast as this market (or piece) is, the first pullback or pause starts 2:30 and ends at 2:55, after that, you missed the entry and the market is off again. Your first potential long was no later than 2:55, but the market has already been moving up without you. So now what do you do? Well, I can tell you, do not fade this market, whatever you do, don't fade this market, because it can end the day on near its high given the way it's moving. And if you did get long early in the day, this is an easy day for you. You want to hold this trade until the end of the day, if possible, and add to your long position on pullbacks. The previous pullback/pause was a good place to add to your long. On a trend day up, the market usually encounters an inventory imbalance in the afternoon when the market gets too long (i.e., an inventory imbalance to the upside). So what does it do? Well, it has to correct that imbalance before it can move higher. That inventory correction came in the form of another pullback that started at 5:00 and ended at 5:32. This is a high probability trade on a trend day (i.e., the inventory correction that normally ensues). That is your second long opportunity. After 5:32, the market resumes the trend. And then towards the end of the day, everyone is now seeing the trend and all the momentum traders are jumping on board. And we start to get a huge bar, a spike, starting at 7:09 and it indeed ends with a climax. So what do you do now? Sell and take your profits, the tempo at the end of the piece is too fast, and unsustainable, this is a spike and a "gift" from the market. You want to see good tempo, but you don't want tempo that is too fast. That is usually the sign of forcing action like long liquidation or short covering. So if the Appassionata is a fast tempo piece indicating a strong trend day, what would be a more rotational type of day. Well consider the following piece instead. This for me is more of what $5DAW described in his post - a rotational day. This is Beethoven's Pathetique (2nd Movement of Sonata). Can you hear the difference? [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2nG1bt7IBM]Freddy kempf - Pathetique Mov 2 - YouTube[/ame]
  9. Feeling the market tempo is extremely helpful in trading, although this concept may be a bit hard to understand. For those trying to understand what tempo means, try relating it to music, where tempo plays an important role. Below is a video of a pianist playing Beethoven's Appassionata (3rd Movement of Sonata). What type of day would this be and where would you initiate a trade based on the tempo of this piece? It's Friday and I'm just having fun with this. Enjoy and have a great weekend! [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xz7usUEPWsc](In HD) Beethoven Sonata Op 57 "Appassionata" Mov3 - YouTube[/ame]
  10. The Market Profile graphic captures the auction market process by organizing the data and allowing one to assess Price, Time, and Volume. Any market that is financial in nature responds to those three components. The volume and TPO profiles both have their place in market analysis - one measures volume and the other measures time. Volume and time together define value. To read the market, both are useful and I use them both throughout the day. I use Market Profile heavily as part of my trading and it is still an effective trading tool that provides me with more information than traditional charts. But as a trader, I use bar charts too because it gives me a bigger perspective by allowing me to see more price data in the chart. I agree with previous posters that Market Profile is not a system. It is a tool for understanding market behavior. However, it appears that most traders use it to trade off of, like fading the value area and single prints, which is far easier than using it for its intended purpose. I believe that most successful traders intuitively understand how markets/auctions work whether they use the profile or not, but the profile does a very good job of capturing the auction process. Using profile shape, value area placement, and volume with the attempted direction is incredibly useful for assessing market confidence, monitoring a trade for continuation and determining who is dominating the market on a given day. When short-term traders dominate the market, traditional technical analysis will work a lot better because the dominant timeframe uses technical analysis themselves. But if the longer timeframe is dominating the market, that's another story. The longer timeframe does not care about day timeframe references, and the longer timeframe will always trump the shorter timeframes. It's quite empowering as a trader to understand what the market is doing many times and then waiting for good trade location to align yourself with the market context.
  11. Hi Idetsc, I won't provide any stats, but will tell you that that is an area worth researching on your own. All the best with your trading! Antonio
  12. Yes, the trade can occur in between bid and ask. I was just trying to keep it simple.
  13. T&S shows trades that have occurred and whether they occurred at the bid or ask price. Each trade requires a buyer and seller. How can someone buy without a seller or how can someone sell without a buyer? For a trade to occur, either the buyer or seller has to go to the market.
  14. Here were potential overnight trades based on the above analysis. Note that these were discussed for the regular trading hours, but if they set up overnight, they are still valid trades. Overnight session opened within Friday's value area.
  15. I agree with much of what Steve has written in this thread, but I'd like to add the following. I agree that the "big players" or longer term traders/investors don't care much about the reference levels that most traders use. But for me, reviewing longer term bar charts, reviewing Market Profile, and applying market logic is an effort to understand what is happening in the market so that I can try to align myself with the dominant player. That is, who is dominating the market on any given day, short-term traders, longer term traders, or both? Whoever the dominant player is, I want to play their game. On those rotational type days, where the market is being dominated by short-term traders, "good" reference levels tend to hold. But when the market is being dominated by longer term traders, those same reference levels get mowed over many times. This is why context is so important in trading and helps with determining trading tactics and devising one's trading plan for the day. This is where my trading edge is - understanding market behavior and adapting to the current market behavior. Am I always right? Of course not. Longer term bar charts and Market Profile provide me with a roadmap as to what is the market condition, who is dominating the market on any given day, where are the longer term traders/investor likely to enter the market, whether inventory is getting too long or too short, where the "destination trades" might go, etc. I always, always, always want to align myself with the longer term players above anything else. Otherwise, I'll play the short-term trading game. And yes, all timeframes are usually in the market on any day, but the question becomes to what degree. In general, I want to align myself with the "big players" and fade the retail trader. IMO, identifying the different timeframes in the market is critical for traders to succeed over the long-term, but it's tough to learn and requires a lot of experience. Reference levels alone do not give an edge, although this is where most newbies focus their efforts because it is easy to learn, again IMO. I'm a strong believer that if you want to fail at trading, just do what everyone else is doing. It's logical if 90% or so of traders fail. Traders usually come up with similar reference levels using different approaches (i.e., Fibs, PP, moving averages, Market Profile, etc.) and blindly fade them without considering market context. Good luck with that! Much of trading success also has to do with trader feel and considering market tempo and the confidence in the market. My trading framework, influenced mostly by Dalton and Wyckoff, has done well in putting me on the right side of the market on most days that I trade. After that, it's a matter of playing the odds of how the market may play out given my interpretation of what the market is doing in the timeframe that I am trading. And, trying to find good trades with good trade location and excellent risk/reward. I'm sure others will disagree with me, but hey, that's what makes a market. Thus far, this is where my journey has taken me. As I gain more trading experience, some of my assumptions will change, but I don't expect [hope] that my framework will change much. Sorry if this post comes off like a lecture, I just have confidence in what I do, and that tends to come out in my writing. I respect all differing viewpoints and enjoy reading them, which is why I still visit trading forums.
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