- 金币:
-
- 奖励:
-
- 热心:
-
- 注册时间:
- 2006-7-3
|
|

楼主 |
发表于 2009-3-23 06:06
|
显示全部楼层
Bearish Engulfing Pattern in the Dow
March 19th, 2008 by Corey Rosenbloom
Today’s near 300 point Dow Jones decline also printed a potential “Bearish Engulfing” candlestick pattern at resistance, which could signal more bearishness is ahead.
Let’s look at the Daily chart and drill down to the smaller time frames:

The Bearish Engulfing pattern occurs when the second day completely overtakes the previous day’s high and low. Technically, only the ‘real body’ must engulf the previous day’s ‘real body,’ but today’s high is greater than yesterday’s high and also today’s low is lower than yesterday’s low, meaning this pattern has increased significance. Keep in mind that yesterday’s gap meant that the market increased more than it fell today, but the actual ‘body’ (intraday price movement) formed the engulfing pattern, so this is a caveat to watch.
The fact that this pattern occurred at key resistance (the falling 50 period moving average) helps increase the odds of potential follow-through to the downside. Recall that there are no guarantees in trading.
Let’s view the 15-minute chart and look at some key divergences which set up recently:

Notice the Positive Divergence on the left side of the chart which resolved nicely to the upside. Now, notice the negative divergence that resolved itself today sharply to the downside. Recall that momentum often precedes price action.
Finally, let’s view the intraday 5-minute chart for some hyper-signals:

Notice that I am mainly using price and the key averages to set-up the simplest trades possible.
The first green arrow represents a “buy” trade which is a simple retracement in a trend entry. Target = Prior Swing (which failed to reach the goal).
The text “Market Losing Steam” isn’t actually a trade, but is a warning sign that the bulls can’t push the market higher. It’s a “market structure” observation that lets you know that momentum is decreasing to the buy side, much like a ball being thrown into the air first slows down before stopping in mid-air and then reversing to come back down to earth.
Finally, there were two “Confluence Short-Sell” trades which set-up due to a retracement to the dual resistance levels of the 20 and 50 period moving averages. One could have classified the 1:30pm trade as a type of “Bear Flag” short-sell trade, but the market didn’t give us a good enough 45 degree angle to increase our confidence there.
Finally, aggressive traders could have played the “Counter-Trend Support Trade” which was good for a very small target only, due to the fact that the trade was countertrend. The test of the 5-minute 200 period moving average set-up this trade.
Finally, another high probability retracement trade occurred at the end of the day when price rallied to $123 (Dow 12,300) and found significant resistance there.
I recommend taking the daily action (or intraday action) and annotating where your ‘ideal trades’ would have been so that you can increase your skills in pattern recognition and trade set-ups in a calmer environment.
2 Comments | add comment
Corey’s Interview with StockTickr!
March 19th, 2008 by Corey Rosenbloom
Dave Mabe at StockTickr recently interviewed me and posted the interview at his StockTickr Trader Interviews site, and I wanted to share the link with you!
I was very excited and honored to participate, and I really had to do some soul-searching on some of the questions.
As a teaser, he writes:
For the next interview in the StockTickr Interview Series (RSS feed), I spoke with Corey Rosenbloom of the Afraid to Trade blog. Corey has a background in psychology and touches on those topics on his site. Trading psychology is a popular theme in the interview series (see the interviews with Van K. Tharp and Brett Steenbarger).
Read on for more about how Corey trades, how trading is a balancing act, and a couple light-bulb moments for his trading.
For more information, check out the complete interview.
While there, check out the features of StockTickr, which is an excellent service which provides trader metrics designed to help you analyze your trading more deeply. The software allows you to keep an almost automatic trading journal, where all you do is input your trades and the service provides you with a plethora of information on your performance.
Thank you again to Dave at StockTickr for this opportunity!
2 Comments | add comment
A Quick Look at the Financials
March 19th, 2008 by Corey Rosenbloom
The Financial Sector (XLF) has been featured majorly in the news recently, so let’s take a quick fly-by of this sector and see where we’ve come.
First, the shocking monthly chart:
Very rarely do you see declines of this magnitude occur this quickly (in about one year) in a major US Sector. The Financial sector is such a significant portion of the economy and stock market, and weakness here is chilling for the broader economy and market. Notice how volume has exploded since 2007, reaching sometimes above 3 billion shares in a given month.
Next, the weekly chart:
I added the volume readings to this chart (on the left) to indicate that over 1 Billion shares were exchanged last week alone â
The previous massive rally (late January) simply terminated at the falling 20 period moving average. How far will this rally go? I suspect we’ll get a test close to the $28 level, but it’s up to the bulls to take it from there.
Finally, the Daily chart:
I pointed out some key short-term divergences (one of which has just resolved) and also pointed out some simple trading entries as price mounted counter-rallies to the falling 50 period moving average. The last three days (including intraday Wednesday) has revealed massive urgency to shift positions (whether bailing out of short-sale trades or scooping up cheap shares to the long-side).
I would wait until price completed a true trend reversal (by making a higher high, and higher low and then taking out the higher high) before getting too excited.
Also, recall that a large portion of this action is due to major percentage increases in Bear Stearns (BSC) at 23%, Goldman Sachs (GS) at 17%, and Lehman Brothers (LEH) at 46% Citigroup (C) at 11% among others. The broader market, and of course the XLF sector, was helped immensely by
March 19th, 2008 by Corey Rosenbloom
Tuesday’s volatile rally was impressive, amassing over 4% for almost all major US Market Indexes. Where does that rally take us on the charts?
First, let’s look at the returns:

Now, let’s view a few charts, noting the potential overhead resistance that must be cleared to be able to get more bullish:

The level just beneath 12,800 would take remarkable buying pressure to overcome. Also, the market is currently failing (intraday) at the declining 50 period moving average, which as served as resistance two times previously.
The NASDAQ (and QQQQ) have some significant resistance to overcome as well:

Resistance comes in the form of the declining 20 period moving average, which has contained price numerous times previously. Also, the 2,275 level has provided recent resistance and must be cleared.
Consider joining detailed analysis and videos, including scans, watchlists, commentary, and other useful features.
[ 本帖最后由 hefeiddd 于 2009-3-23 06:08 编辑 ] |
|
|