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发表于 2008-4-19 13:28
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Seed Wave and Fibonacci 1.618 target A "Seed Wave" is simply the first wave in a reversal. It is the seed because all subsequent waves are based upon the amplitude of the first wave. Typically the next wave - Wave 3 (Wave 2 is the intermediate retracement) is usually a Fibonacci growth ratio based on the Seed. Typically it is in the area of 1.382 ~ 1.618. Here, it was exceeded.
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On why the Universal is not for "momentum trading" [07:08] <cuzzo> So what we are doing is catching the reversal trade.
We are not going for the momentum move if the market is going up or down at the current time?
[07:10] <enthios> Correct. This is not momentum, and the reason is simple: We NEVER know when there is going to be a momentum move, until it has ALREADY OCCURRED. It's a false idol. A dream.
[07:11] <enthios> But we DO KNOW (with a reasonable degree of confidence) what will happen WHEN prices touch the VPC. We don't know which VPC the market will touch - whether it is the upper, or the lower - We have no idea. We only know what to do once one of the VPC's is touched. That's why the Universal is an objective method. Or, at least, as objective as they get. I don't' know of any other method that shows you, in advance, where you will go long or short. With clear targets, and a clearly defined entry and exit point
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On using range charts: [06:54] <omar> Does the range makes so much difference?
Or better say, any reason to use range and not ticks or volume or anything?
[06:55] <enthios> tick should work fine. I used to use tick but in Ensign, using the IB data, they only had back data for 24 hours. If you wanted to go further back, they switched to a different data service. And the tick data was incompatible with the live tick data. However, you don't really need back data for tick charts. Only the most recent 24 hours. On the other hand, I now prefer range charts. Because you KNOW the high and low of the bar before it completes. That makes it much easier to enter a stop-limit trade for entry.
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On fast charts vs. slow charts: [06:58] <cuzzo> but if we want a faster chart what is a good choice?
[06:59] <enthios> Here's the bottom line: You are watching the VPC. That is the point at which you want to enter a reversal trade. Once you reach that point, you can use any method you choose, to get into that trade. Use a 60-tick chart, or 1-minute, or 50 range, or 5 range. Totally up to you. Recognize that there will be a trade-off. The 'faster' you get in the trade, the 'earlier' you get in. And sometimes that is not good. The EARLIEST you can get in, is to simply place a limit order at the precise VPC, and ignore any stochastics or other method of getting in. That is pure and simple. But the fact is, often times the price moves past the VPC - so you don't necessarily want to get in precisely at the VPC. So you want to achieve a balance.
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The advantages of Stop Limit orders Here is a good example of using a stop limit order to enter the trade. With the new price range indicator (thanks to "Sputnik" in our trading room!), you can see the price that is one tick above, and one tick below, the current bar. In this case, it enabled you to enter a stop limit order for the short at one tick below the low of the signal bar, which was 1347.75. As subsequent bar lows were higher, you simply move the stop limit upwards, trailing the stop entry until a retrace hits. The actual entry is shown here as the base of the second bar after the signal, at 1348.75. That's a savings of $50 per contract, on one trade.
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