Support and Resistance
Support and Resistance is something to always be looking for on the charts as it is a very important part of trading.
The more you study it, the more it will amaze you at how accurate support and resistance areas can be at times.
That being said, another important thing to always remember when looking for Support and Resistance is that it is an area and not a specific number, so generally be looking for an area for Support and Resistance to come in at and give it some leed way.
Here is a chart of the Dollar showing how the last resistance high turned the market down the next time is was traded up to.
How to Swing Trade Stocks
Here are a few ideas on how to swing trade stocks.
Below is a classic swing trading set-up, where the stock made a bull swing and then a counter trend pull back.
With this swing trading strategy we are using the 10-10 bands to help us see the up trend and pull back in the stock.
We could see the up trend and pull back using only price, but the moving averages help to make the set-up stand out, so we can see it happening easier.
The moving average bands also help us see the up trend, and give us a place to look for support to come in at.
Once we have the swing trading set-up then it is time to look for a entry point and stop if wrong into the stock.
The chart below shows the idea of buying at support and using the last major swing low as a stop.
The chart below shows how you could buy on an a-b-c correction, using the b wave high as the entry point, with the c wave low as the stop.
If you don’t follow Elliott Wave, you could also just look at this as a W type bottom and the top of the W is a buy point.
The last chart of this swing trading stocks education is to buy on the breakout of a Cup with Handle.
Just to give you confidence that this can be done in real time and not just in hind site, I had put out a chart in my newsletter showing the Cup with Handle forming in DTLK before the breakout point (entry signal) was traded above, so if you were following this stock closely, there would have been no reason you couldn’t have gotten in before the big gap up after the breakaway point was crossed.
So there is a stock swing trading set-up and three different ways that you could have used to enter the trade, and the entry point to use is the one that fits your trading style the best.
Some stock swing traders will like to try and buy into the low to get a lower price for the stock, anticipating the move higher, while other stock swing traders will want to wait for confirmation a low is in by waiting for a buy point to be crossed.
More on Swing Trading Stocks
In my premium stock newsletter we were already long DTLK from before any of the above charts were made.
The reason I mention this is because I didn’t use any of the above information to go long DTLK but was looking at other technical things the stock had done earlier.
The point being if you had been following DTLK for while and were already bullish on the stock because of earlier price action, it would have made it emotionally easier to have entred the stock swing trade on the above ideas because you would already be bullish the stock and looking for it to move higher.
I’ll cover all the other things I was looking at in another swing trading education lesson, it might be with another stock when I finally get around to it but the ideas are always the same.
Thanks for reading my article on How to Swing Trade Stocks !!
Jim Robinson
P.S.
Here is a Directional Movement Swing Trading Lesson I did on the same stock, so you can see how the Directional Movement Indicator could have also helped you swing trade this stock.
Swing Trading Stocks with the Directional Movement Indicator
Moving Average Trading Education
Here is a moving average trading lesson that shows you how to buy a stock that is in an up trend on the weekly time frame.
The 10 and 50 week moving averages are often used by stock traders and we will use those for this moving average lesson.
When the 10 week moving average is above the 50 week moving average and both are trending higher, odds are that the stock will continue high so we will be looking for good places to go long.
When the 10 and 50 week moving averages are in a clear up trend they will be a place to look for support to come in when the stock makes a counter trend correction.
No matter how strong a trend is, there will always be corrections along the way to higher prices, as that is the way stocks work.
—-
Place to Consider Buying #1
So a good place to consider buying an up trending stock is on a counter trend pull back to the 10 and 50 week moving average area.
This is buying a stock on weakness and the stop is wrong would go below the 50 week moving average.
—–
Place to Consider Buying #2
The other way to enter a stock when the moving averages are showing a strong up trend is to buy when the last pivot high, made just before the correction, is traded above.
This is buying on strength and the stop if wrong would be just below the last pivot low made on the correction.
These are both goo entry point techniques when trading moving averages, and you will need to decide which one you like the best, and which one fits your trading style the best.
Elliott Wave Oscillator
Here is an idea of how the Elliott Waves play out on the trading chart.
ELLIOT WAVES
Elliot waves are the best way to there is to have an idea where you are at in the current market struture. What we are doing with Elliot waves is labeling market swings with a 1,2,3,4,5 count with the trend and an A,B,C, count against the trend when the market pulls back and makes a correction in the current trend. The key to using Elliot wave counts is to tie it in with our other systems and indicators and this will help us use Elliot waves for greater profits. Elliot waves help make sense of the markets and makes them more fun to follow and trade.
MARKET LOW EXAMPLE – BULL SWING
WAVE 1
When a market bottoms and the low is in place the first rally up is usually a weak rally because the new trend is really not established and there is still alot of buying and selling going on. The tug of war is still on for market direction. Buyers are just beginning to get the upper hand.
WAVE 2
Is a pullback (correction) of wave 1 and a test of the low by the market.People that sold into (shorted) the wave 1 rally thinking the trend is still down now have thier stops at the wave 1 high (last pivot high) and people who bought the low have their stops just below the last pivot low causing lots of market tension.
WAVE 3
Takes out the top of wave one and this is where the shorts cover (buy back) their now losing positions and this along with the buyers gaining the upper hand causes the market to take off. Wave 3 is where every body knows the trend and it’s up. The market has caught traders attention and the biggest part of the rally (the trend part of the move) takes place.
WAVE 4
Is a profit taking decline in which traders have started to close winning long positions. The trend is still up so the traders that took profits at higher prices start to buy back in when prices move lower and traders that missed the wave 3 think this is a good place to get long with the trend so they buy. This buying starts a new rally.
WAVE 5
Is a rally to new highs but lacks the enthusiasm and strength that wave 3 had. Prices make a new high but the strength compared to wave 3 is small. When the new buying interest becomes less sellers take over and a market correction or a new down trend begins. Wave 5 has momentum indicator divergences.
———————————————-
Elliott Wave counts can be seen by using a 5 and 35 period moving average and you just use that combination for all time frames.
Waves 1 and 2
The wave 1 and wave 2 count is not always clear on the oscillator, but the trick to knowing the 1 and 2 Elliott Wave counts is that if you are following the Oscillator you will have an idea that the previous 5th wave is completed, so you will be looking for waves 1 and 2.
Wave 3
When the 5 period moving average moves away from the 35 day moving average that is the Elliott 3rd wave and should be very clear on the chart.
Wave 4
When the 5 and 35 day moving averages move together that is the place to look for the 4th wave to come in at.
Wave 5
When the 4th wave low comes in we are then looking for a 5th wave move to happen next.
This is very important and powerful trading information to have when trading any market.
Elliott Wave Theory
The good thing about using Elliott Wave Theory when trading is that it can give you very valuable information and is the best way I know of to predict future market move, especially the 3-4-5 combination.
The bad thing about Elliott Wave Theory is that the market don’t always play out the count as you would expect, for instance you may see a clear 3-4-5 set-up but the 5th wave never happens.
So Elliott Wave Theory will often gets the reputation of being unreliable, but my thinking on this is that nothing in trading is perfect all the time, so if Elliott Wave Theory isn’t perfect, that still doesn’t mean it isn’t some that is good to use as a tool for trading.
The Way to Use Elliott Waves
The way I believe a trader should use Elliott Wave is to keep track of the way counts, while at the same time being realistic and knowing the market may not play out the way you are expecting it to, and then use your other technical indicators for entry points and stops.
Below are the a couple weekly charts of Coffee showing that an Elliott 5th wave is probably on the way for Coffee.
So we could use that information to be looking for a buy signal on the daily time frame.
If we don’t get a good trade set-up on the daily time frame then there is nothing lost by following the Elliott Wave Count and Oscillator, but of we do get a good entry point and get into a Coffee trade we have a good idea that Coffee will more than likely move to new highs on the weekly time frame, again I believe that is information worth having, but as always every trader must decide for themselves, but as for me I like to look at Elliott Wave Counts as it is more information to help with my trading decisions.
—————————————————-
Elliott Wave Oscillator Education
Here is Video Trading Education on the Elliott Wave Oscillator.
Elliott Wave Oscillator Video Education – Please Click Here
—————————————————-
Here is an Interview with Robert Prechter
Most people are more interested in how the Wave Principle works than why it works. Is there any one thing people need to remember to make it work for them?
The key to Elliott Wave patterns is that the market goes three steps forward for every two steps back. If you do not get scared by the two steps back, and if you are not euphorically confident after the third step forward, you’re light-years ahead of the pack. Even then, I would add that it is one easy thing to recognize that the Wave Principle governs stock prices, while it is quite another to predict the next wave, and still another to profit from the exercise. There is no substitute for experience, so that you can learn what you feel and when you feel it, with respect to market behavior.
Jack Frost has described the Wave Principle as something that has to be seen to be believed. What does he mean by that?
The principle is complicated to express in words. With the Wave Principle, you are dealing with a phenomenon that reveals itself visually. Try describing the concept and variations of “tree” in detail to someone who’s never seen one and you’ll see that it can be a complex task. Saying, “Look! There’s one,” is a lot easier. The human brain is very good at recognizing a pattern visually. If a computer must be programmed to recognize shapes in the sky, it would be difficult to teach it the difference between a cloud and bird and an airplane. Once you have that programmed, of course, a blimp floats by and the computer is in trouble. The human brain works differently, however, and is extremely efficient at pattern recognition. If you draw out the Principle, it is much more quickly grasped. Then when you compare actual market pictures with the model, you can accept the truth more readily. It is at the perceptual level that it is best presented, then, not the conceptual.
Can you really teach it?
Sure. Video is an excellent approach, for instance. A lot of people have learned how to apply it that way. Some have trouble at first, but then say “Once I saw your video tape, I understood it all.”
What are the Wave Principle’s key strengths?
Frost liked to say, “Its most striking characteristics are its generality and its accuracy.” Its generality gives market perspective most of the time, and its accuracy in pointing out changes in direction is almost unbelievable at times.
Why does the Wave Principle work so well?
Because it is 100% technical. No armchair theorizing from economics and politics is required.
What are its biggest shortcomings?
There is one main weakness, and this accounts for just about all the problems. There are eleven different patterns for corrections. When a correction starts, it is impossible to tell in advance which pattern has begun, so you do not know how it is going to unfold. Therefore, the best that you can do is apply some of Elliott’s observations as guidelines in making an intelligent guess as to what it is.
Another problem is that corrections can do what Elliott called “double” or “triple” — that is, repeat several times. Triple corrections are the largest formations possible, so at least there is a limit. These repetitions can be frustrating because they can last decades. For example, we had a 16-year sideways correction in the Dow Jones Industrial Average from 1966 to 1982. A.J. Frost and I thought it was over in 1974, and the market was ready for another bull wave. To be sure, most stocks rose from that point forward, but the Dow went sideways for another eight years in a doubling of the time element, which caused some frustrations before the next bull wave finally began on August 12, 1982.
It sounds like a chess game. The number of possibilities, and therefore the probabilities of success, vary at certain junctures.
Chess provides an excellent analogy. The market can do whatever it wants, except that it will always do it in an Elliott Wave structure. Similarly, your opponent can move chess pieces wherever he wants, except that he must follow basic rules. On the other side of the board, you still have a lot of hard thinking to do despite your absolute knowledge that pieces must move according to those rules.
Are there situations where the Wave Principle does not hold true?
No, it always holds true. But of course, it is one thing to say the markets will follow the Wave Principle and another thing entirely to forecast the future based on that knowledge. It is always a question of probabilities. Once you have hands-on experience with it, once you understand all the rules and guidelines, it is a lot like becoming Sherlock Holmes. There are many possible outcomes, but guidelines force you along certain paths of thinking. You finally reach a point where the evidence becomes overwhelming for a certain conclusion.
Have you ever had a case where you thought the probability of a certain outcome was high, say 90%, but the market went otherwise from your expectation? What did you do then?
Of course it happens. But you should never be wrong for long relative to the degree that you are trying to assess. One of the terrific things about the approach is that it’s price that tips you off. With other approaches, price can go a long way before the reason behind your opinion changes, if it ever does. No matter how difficult the pattern is to read sometimes, it always resolves satisfactorily into a classic pattern.
Can you illustrate how knowledge of “wave structure” comes into play when trading?
For instance, the bottom of the fourth wave, which is a pullback, cannot overlap the peak of the first rally. If it does, then it’s not a fourth wave. The fourth wave is still ahead of you, and the third wave is subdividing. Knowing this tenet can keep you out of a lot of trouble that an armchair wave counter would encounter. Another very basic tenet is that wave three is never the shortest. It is usually the longest. Wave three is the recognition stage when most people get aboard.
But if there is always a correct pattern, and it is only a matter of seeing it, why aren’t accuracy levels higher than the 40%, 50%, 60% or even the 80% ratios of hits to misses?
First, just because R.N. Elliott discerned that the market follows rules as in a chess game doesn’t mean you can predict the market’s next move. All you can give are probabilities. But the psychological difficulties are at least an equal impediment. Hamilton Bolton once said that the hardest thing he had to learn when using Elliott was to believe what he saw. Despite all I know, I have fallen prey to that problem more than once. The fact that even perfect analysis only results in the best probability provides the uncertainty that feeds the psychological unease. As Frost is fond of saying, “The market always leaves its options open.” So when you combine human weakness with a game of probability, the result is many errors in judgment. Nevertheless, I must stress that the ratio of success with Elliott is better than that with other approaches, and that is the only rational basis for judging its value. Besides, the inestimable value of the Wave Principle is not so much that it provides a high percentage of correct “calls” on the market, but that it always gives the investor a sense of perspective.
Is it possible that the system merely takes into account every possible pattern and thus allows the practitioner to force things into a satisfactory wave count retrospectively — but not prospectively?
No, for two reasons. First, if that were true, then there would be no record of success such as the Wave Principle has over the decades. There are numerological approaches to the market, ones based on fantasy that may as well be dealing with a random walk, and they produce worthless results, as they should. As Paul Montgomery likes to say, a good test of a theory is whether it can predict. Second, there are many non-Elliott patterns that the market could trace out if it were a random walk; but it has never done it. I have never seen a market unfold in other than an Elliott Wave pattern.
Have you ever had a sure thing — a case where the market absolutely had to go up or down?
All Elliott can do is order the probabilities, and they are never 100%. But there have definitely been times when my own mind felt that the probability was 100%. I get so excited I can barely contain myself when that happens. I’m usually right then, but not always!
Keep in mind that while one can never say that a certain event must happen, there are times when one can say that a particular market event is impossible. There’s always an alternate count, but there are certain things that can’t happen under Elliott. And that is a very useful fact.
The calls you made on stocks, bonds and gold helped you to establish yourself as a media presence in the 1980s. But one response to the record is to say that the Wave Principle is not behind your success. Some say it is gut feel or instinct, rather than the method. In other words, it’s not the theory, it’s the theorist. You’ve always insisted that it is the Wave Principle. How can you be sure it’s giving you the edge and not the other way around?
Gut feel and instinct will get you clobbered in the market. The market is the collective gut, which means you have to be counter-instinctual to beat it. The only way to do that is with a method that takes that reality into account.
Looking in more detail at an Elliott wave, what is the progression that takes place over the course of an “impulse,” which is Elliott’s term for the classic five-wave pattern?
If you watch any of these wave structures, whether over the last 40 weeks, 40 years or 40 minutes, you see the same progression recurring. After a market reaches its low, so-called strong hands — people who have been around a long time, do some buying. Psychology has passed its low point. News remains scary because it is the tangible result of the prior downtrend in psychology. That is the first wave up.
Then the second wave, the correction of the first move, takes place. The vast majority of investors are convinced that wave 1 was merely a bounce in the previous bear market and that wave 2 is the beginning of the next phase of decline. Usually, the fears that were around at the actual bottom recur at the bottom of wave 2. Again, news is very dark, but the prices are ahead of news. They do not fall to a new low.
From that base, wave 3 begins, which is the middle portion of the larger advance, and that third wave is almost always accompanied by increasingly positive news and “fundamentals.” Those better fundamentals are the result of the increase in optimism, and they reinforce the psychological upturn. That is why wave 3, as Elliott noted, is most often the longest, strongest and broadest in the sequence. Every day, there is reason to be optimistic. All of those people who thought during waves 1 and 2 that the long-term trend was down finally become convinced that the long-term trend is up.
That change persists all the way to the top of wave 3. Then comes wave 4, which is a correction of that long third. Most people have finally become convinced by the top of wave 3 that the long-term trend is up. Wave 4 is a surprising disappointment.
From the fourth wave correction low, the market stages the final wave up. The fifth wave is generally easy to recognize because the psychology tends to be more speculative and euphoric, while at the same time, the internal strength, or momentum, of the market is not as strong as it was during wave 3. The psychology goes through its final binge in the fifth wave. That’s when, figuratively speaking, the last guy puts his last nickel in, and that’s the end of the sequence.
Let’s examine one of these waves — the fifth wave — since, by your wave count, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has been in a fifth wave of Grand Supercycle, Supercycle and Cycle degree for the better part of many people’s lives. What is the profile?
The market is usually quite selective and rotational in a fifth, creating a weak upward trend or even a sideways trend in the advance-decline line. You will often see huge rises in certain individual issues, while many lag significantly. Usually in fifth waves, the general speculation is concentrated most heavily in the blue chip sector. You also generally see the market attracting new players, unsophisticated players who have been watching the bull market year after year and finally became convinced that they should be involved.
That is one reason why the market, or at least large segments of the market, become extremely overvalued. It is attracting new players who have no concept of value and are just willing to buy because they think someone else will be buying from them tomorrow. In other words, it’s an engine that is running on increasingly available fuel — which is more people with money — with its forward movement as it own end. The situation creates a speculative bubble, a chasing of paper value for quick profit. Often it is a craze that sinks very deeply into the society. We had this style of advance in the 1920s, for instance.
In this most recent fifth wave, mechanisms were put in place that fostered terrific speculation. There was the development of the stock index futures market and the very intricate options markets, with options on stocks, options on futures indexes, and so forth. There has been increased media coverage as well. In fact, it’s an incalculable increase. Television, for instance, didn’t report on business or markets prior to the 1981 launch of Financial News Network, which is now CNBC. It has been so successful that more all-business news networks are about to be launched. It’s a great major top signal.
In following in Elliott’s footsteps, you moved out onto some relatively unexplored intellectual terrain. Your idea that history reflects the Wave Principle is one of them. Your identification of cultural trends as reflective of the overall mood is another. Regardless of the subfield you discuss, though, you reiterate that “mass psychology is structured,” and that Elliott identified the structure. After witnessing this movement in the stock market data and its apparent constancy, both you and Elliott have concluded that collective human sociology is not random, but travels a path as if following a law of nature, like gravity or thermodynamics. If this is true, then science, the study of nature, should supply some corroborating testimony. Is there anything going on in science to support you on this?
During the past 20 years, several scientists have reintroduced the idea of the fractal geometry of nature. The recent work has been pioneered by Benoit Mandelbrot. His computer studies revealed that many processes in nature, while at first appearing chaotic, are actually very structured, but in ways most people have never considered. The component structures are not simple geometric forms like circles and squares; they may be very jagged constructs. But the components of the jagged pattern are jagged to the same degree as the larger pattern itself. If you take a stalk of broccoli as a common example, and you break off a piece near the top, the piece you break off looks exactly like a stalk of broccoli. If you break off a smaller piece from it, it also looks exactly like a stalk of broccoli — just smaller. The components take the shape of the whole. What’s exciting to me is that Elliott noticed the same thing about stock market prices half a century before Mandelbrot.
From an Elliott wave perspective, there are also differences within the same market. Advances and declines, bull and bear markets, take different shapes. Is this also true of the psychology in bull and bear markets?
The problem with declines is that they can follow a lot more paths, because there are numerous corrective patterns. At the start of a bear market, all you have are hints. You have little certainty about which one of the shapes is going to take place. All you can say is it is going to be rough for a while. Bob Farrell says that a bear market goes from caution to concern to capitulation. In most patterns, that’s true, but in contracting triangles, it goes the opposite way: capitulation, concern, then caution, or at least complete disregard.
Bear markets tend to bring bad news in one form or another, regardless of their shape. Triangles, for instance, are seemingly moderate sideways patterns. Yet there is almost always a scary event or point of focus in wave e, the last wave, that keeps you out of the next advance. In a large bear market, wave e of an upward triangle correction usually features a bullish event that gets you to buy just before the rug is pulled. However, the worst news — the news that turns out making the history books — usually awaits the end of a large bear market. Bull markets do it again, only the other way around. They save the best news for last. Just look at the amazing world news of the past six years: Communists giving up power, old enemies signing peace pacts, the implications of the computer revolution.
In real time, the Wave Principle is a lot more complicated than it sounds when you simply describe the types of waves. Dealing with corrections is particularly difficult. What makes it so much more difficult to pinpoint your position in a corrective wave than an impulse waves?
Five-stage movements are generally uniform, with very few exceptions to the rule. When prices are moving with the trend, they are moving very freely, and you get the full five-wave structure. In that case, analysis is not that much harder than it sounds on paper. But when the short-term trend is fighting the intermediate-term trend, it is going against the tide. Corrective processes by their very nature are fighting the larger flow of price movement. When the market is fighting the flow, it can only go so far. It never develops the five waves. In 10 years of studying the market, I’ve never seen an exception.
Is this also why there are several different ways that corrections can unfold?
Corrections are the point at which the out-flowing river meets the incoming tide. The jumble that results is far less uniform than the river’s flow or the tidal force. As a result, knowing exactly which of the corrective patterns has begun is impossible at the outset. The analyst knows that moves against the larger trend never develop into full five waves, but he does not know precisely which non-five wave structure it will be. Nevertheless, R.N. Elliott’s compilation of the list of countertrend patterns is the product of brilliance. Though there are a number of them, he described them clearly, and that is of substantial value in practical application.
Is there a simple guideline that a novice can follow to help him weather corrective Elliott Wave patterns?
Sure. During these periods in which Elliott Wave analysis is the most difficult, do nothing. It is not necessary to forecast all the time unless you are in the business, like I am. So just wait for the pattern to clear and then take action.
Some analysts get annoyed at this. They say, “That’s the problem with the Wave Principle. It doesn’t work in bear markets.”
Well, tough break! Bear markets are what they are. If someone objects to what the market is, then he is arguing with nature and the reality of markets. “Less predictable” does not mean impossible, indecipherable, disorderly or random, either. You can form some useful opinions about corrections. The ultimate price goal of a fourth wave correction, for instance, can be forecast with more accuracy than most impulses. What’s more, it is the Wave Principle that tells the analyst when to expect less predictability. So your overheard “objection” is not a problem with the Wave Principle, much less a revelation of where the Wave Principle cannot be applied. That the Wave Principle recognizes the differences in market behavior is one of its greatest strengths.
What about those who say investing with impulse waves, or in the direction of the trend, isn’t that hard anyway?
Tell that to 83% of the professional money managers who under-performed the Standard & Poor’s or the Dow Jones Industrial Average for three years in the heart of the bull market of the 1980s. Tell it to the 98% of money managers who got killed in the last downward impulse in 1973-1974. Tell that to the 99% of the public who lose money in their investments over the long run. I, for one, recognize the fact that successful investing is extremely difficult. Anyone who tells you it is not is headed for a fall.
Can Elliott save you from a fall?
It can save you from a catastrophic loss. It is one of the few concepts I know that allows the investor to get out of a losing position with a small loss for an objective reason. The alternatives are to ride it out or simply get out because an arbitrary “stop” level has been reached, which nine times out of ten gets you out just before the big gains are due.
—————————————-
Forex Training
You need forex training before you start to trade forex and here is the forex training information you will need to become a successful forex trader.
Forex Trading Basics Articles
Here are a few articles explaining the basics of Forex Trading.
The below Forex articles will give you a good start to your forex training.
—————————————-
Forex Training Technical Analysis
You should learn Technical Analysis to trade forex and here is some great Technical Analysis information for Forex Training.
A wide Variety of Technical Analysis Information
How to Trade the Directional Movement Indicator
———————————————–
Directional Movement Trading Education
What is Swing Trading
From Investopedia.com
Swing trading has been described as a kind of fundamental trading in which positions are held for longer than a single day. This is because most fundamentalists are actually swing traders since changes in corporate fundamentals generally require several days or even a week to cause sufficient price movement that renders a reasonable profit. (See Introduction to Types of Trading: Fundamental Traders)
But this description of swing trading is a simplification. In reality, swing trading sits in the middle of the continuum between day trading to trend trading. A day trader will hold a stock anywhere from a few seconds to a few hours but never more than a day; a trend trader examines the long-term fundamental trends of a stock or index, and may hold the stock for a few weeks or months. Swing traders hold a particular stock for a period of time, generally a few days or two or three weeks, which is between those extremes, and they will trade the stock on the basis of its intra-week or intra-month oscillations between optimism and pessimism.
Reviewing Different Types of Traders
Before we focus on swing trading, let’s review all the other major styles of equity trading:
•Scalping – The scalper is an individual who makes dozens or hundreds of trades per day, trying to “scalp” a small profit from each trade by exploiting the bid-ask spread. (You can read about scalping in Introduction to Types of Trading: Scalpers.)
•Momentum Trading – Momentum traders look to find stocks that are moving significantly in one direction on high volume and try to jump on board to ride the momentum train to a desired profit. (You can read about momentum trading in Introduction to Types of Trading: Momentum Traders.)
•Technical Trading – Technical traders are obsessed with charts and graphs, watching lines on stock or index graphs for signs of convergence or divergence that might indicate buy or sell signals. (You can read about technical trading in Introduction to Types of Trading: Technical Traders.)
•Fundamental Trading – Fundamentalists trade companies based on fundamental analysis, which examines things like corporate events such as actual or anticipated earnings reports, stock splits, reorganizations or acquisitions. (You can read about fundamental trading in Introduction to Types of Trading: Fundamental Traders.)
The Right Stock
The first key to successful swing trading is picking the right stocks. The best candidates are large-cap stocks that are among the most actively traded stocks on the major exchanges. In an active market, these stocks will swing between broadly defined high and low extremes, and the swing trader will ride the wave in one direction for a couple of days or weeks only to switch to the opposite side of the trade when the stock reverses direction.
The Right Market
It should be noted that in either of the two market extremes, the bear-market environment or raging bull market, swing trading proves to be a rather different challenge than in a market that is between these two extremes. In these extremes, even the most active stocks will not exhibit the same up-and-down oscillations that they would when indexes are relatively stable for a few weeks or months. In a bear market or a raging bull market, momentum will generally carry stocks for a long period of time in one direction only, thereby confirming that the best strategy is to trade on the basis of the longer-term directional trend.
The swing trader, therefore, is best positioned when markets are going nowhere – when indexes rise for a couple of days and then decline for the next few days only to repeat the same general pattern again and again. A couple of months might pass with major stocks and indexes roughly the same as their original levels, but the swing trader has had many opportunities to catch the short-term movements up and down (sometimes within a channel).
Of course, the problem with both swing trading and long-term trend trading is that success is based on correctly identifying what type of market is currently being experienced. Trend trading would have been the ideal strategy for the raging bull market of the last half of the 1990s, while swing trading probably would have been best for 2000 and 2001.
The Baseline
Much research on historical data has proven that in a market conducive to swing trading liquid stocks tend to trade above and below a baseline value, which is portrayed on a chart with an exponential moving average (EMA). In his book “Come Into My Trading Room: A Complete Guide To Trading” (2002), Dr. Alexander Elder uses his understanding of a stock’s behavior above and below the baseline to describe the swing trader’s strategy of ‘buying normalcy and selling mania’ or ‘shorting normalcy and covering depression’. Once the swing trader has used the EMA to identify the typical baseline on the stock chart, he or she goes long at the baseline when the stock is heading up and short at the baseline when the stock is on its way down.
So, swing traders are not looking to hit the home run with a single trade – they are not concerned about perfect timing to buy a stock exactly at its bottom and sell exactly at its top (or vice versa). In a perfect trading environment, they wait for the stock to hit its baseline and confirm its direction before they make their moves. The story gets more complicated when a stronger uptrend or downtrend is at play: the trader may paradoxically go long when the stock jumps below its EMA and wait for the stock to go back up in an uptrend, or he or she may short a stock that has stabbed above the EMA and wait for it to drop if the longer trend is down.
Taking Profits
When it comes time to take profits, the swing trader will want to exit the trade as close as possible to the upper or lower channel line without being overly precise, which may cause the risk of missing the best opportunity. In a strong market when a stock is exhibiting a strong directional trend, traders can wait for the channel line to be reached before taking their profit, but in a weaker market they may take their profits before the line is hit (in the event that the direction changes and the line does not get hit on that particular swing).
Conclusion
Swing trading is actually one of the best trading styles for the beginning trader to get his or her feet wet, but it still offers significant profit potential for intermediate and advanced traders. Swing traders receive sufficient feedback on their trades after a couple of days to keep them motivated, but their long and short positions of several days are of the duration that does not lead to distraction. By contrast, trend trading offers greater profit potential if a trader is able to catch a major market trend of weeks or months, but few are the traders with sufficient discipline to hold a position for that period of time without getting distracted. On the other hand, trading dozens of stocks per day (day trading) may just prove too great a white-knuckle ride for some, making swing trading the perfect medium between the extremes.
Commodity Contract Values
The four major grains: Wheat, corn, soybeans, and oats, the price is quoted in dollars and cents for both futures and options. For example, a price quote of 4.09 1/2 is actually 4 dollars 9 and 1/2 cents per bushel. These grains all move in 1/4 cent increments, which is $12.50 of real money. Profit or loss of 1 cent = $50.00
Soybean meal: The contract is quoted in dollars (and cents) per ton (100 ton contract). When you see a price of 180.50, it means one hundred eighty dollars and fifty cents per ton. When you see a change of -.30 it means 30 cents per ton, though often referred to as 30 points. In this case, you’d be up or down $30 on the day. The mini contract is exactly half of the regular bean meal contract and attractive to trade because it is not too diluted.
Bean Oil: The 60,000 pound contract is quoted in dollars and cents per 100 pounds. When you see 2650 it is actually twenty-six dollars and fifty cents per 100 pounds of bean oil. When you see a change of +.09, it actually means 9 cents per 100 pounds, but is commonly stated as nine points. One point equals six dollars, so a nine point move would mean a difference of $54 dollars. Options are quoted in points.
Meats: The contracts are quoted in cents per pound. There are one hundred points to a cent, each point being worth $4 except in Feeder Cattle, where each point is worth $5. So, a full cent move is worth $400, unless it’s feeder cattle which would be $500. If you see a price of 57.25, this is in fact fifty-seven cents and twenty-five one hundredths of a cent (25/100 of one cent). The decimal point is not meant to be a divider between dollars and cents. This guideline also works for options. The premium may be 3.70, the easy way to figure out the dollar value is to drop the decimal and multiply by the point value, so 370 on a cattle option would be 370 times $4 per point = $1480.
Foods or “Softs”: Coffee, Orange Juice, and Sugar are all quoted in cents per pound. This means you can use the same methods you used to figure out the meats. Cocoa is a little different, it is quoted in even dollar amounts per ton. When you see a price of 1612, it actually means one thousand six-hundred twelve dollars per ton. There are ten tons in a contract, so if you see a change of +21 per ton, multiply by ten, or add 0 to get a real dollar value change of $210.00. Options are the same, just add a 0 to the premium price to give you the cost of the option.
Metals: Gold, Platinum, and Palladium are just as they appear with regards to how dollars and cents usually appear. The numbers to the left of the decimal point are dollars, and the numbers to the right of decimal point point are cents. Here, points are the same as cents. (The 100 oz palladium contract yields $1 per point for an actual cash gain or loss of $85.00. per contract) Silver is more like the grains such as corn or wheat. One penny move equals a cash value of $50.00. In the paper, you often see it quoted as 599.5, with a change of -5.5. This actually means that an ounce of silver is worth $5.99 1/2 dollars, down 5 1/2 cents. Silver can settle on one tenth of a cent but it only trades every half cent. Silver options, however, do trade in one tenth increments, so you can be very precise in buying a silver option.
Copper is quoted in cents per pound, instead of cents per ounce. It is a 25,000 pound contract, so if each pound increased in value by one penny, you’d have 25000 pennies, which is equal to $250 dollars. One point is one one hundredth of that, or $2.50. So if copper goes up 30 points, you figure by multiplying 30 times $2.50 = $75.00. Options are quoted in points, so a 215 point option is worth 215 times $2.50 which equals $537.5. Energies: Crude oil is quoted in dollars per barrel (bbl). A price of 14.50 is fourteen dollars and fifty cents per barrel. Each contract has 1000 barrels, so a price movement from 14.50 to 14.51 is worth ten bucks per contract.
Heating Oil and Unleaded Gas are quoted in cents per gallon, just like at the gas pump. The contract size is 42,000 gallons, so each point is worth $4.20. A move from 5200 to 5205 is worth 5 times $4.20, or $21 dollars. Options are quoted in points, so an option going for 85 points is worth 85 times $4.20, or $357 dollars. Natural Gas is quoted in BTU’s, or British Thermal Units, which is a measurement of heat. Each notch this contract moves is worth $10, which is ten points.
Woods and Fibers: Cotton is quoted in cents per pound, with 50,000 pounds in a contract. It’s just like copper, except twice as big, so each point is worth $5.00. Lumber traded in 80000 board feet, each point is worth eighty cents, the minimum fluctuation is 10 points, or $8.00 ( I try to stay a little confused about lumber so I won’t be tempted to trade it, it’s illiquid and volatile).
Currencies: The exchange quotes dollar based currency futures in “American Terms” which is the dollar price of of each foreign currency. For example $.6500 per one Swiss Franc. Another way to think about is, how much of our currency does it take to buy one of theirs, sixty five cents buys one Swiss Franc. To figure profit or loss, drop the decimal point and multiply the point change by the point value in dollars. For example $.6500 to .6465 is 35 points times $12.5 per point which equals $437.50.
How Commodity Margins Work
Perhaps the biggest advantage to trading futures contracts is the leverage provided by the exchange. However, controlling large contracts with relatively low amounts of capital can create high levels of volatility. As a result, many traders will argue that leverage is actually a disadvantage. Regardless of your opinion on leverage and margin requirements, it is important that you fully understand the concepts.
Before a customer can establish a position he is required to make a minimum “good faith deposit,” or margin, to assure the performance of his obligations. A margin deposit is, in essence, a performance bond, which is usually between 5% and 10% of the underlying contract value. A good faith deposit indicates the buyer or seller’s willingness and capability to compensate the opposite party to a transaction.
Because margin requirements are low, hedgers are given the ability to lock in pricing of cash market goods without tying up a lot of capital. It would be counter productive for a hedger who handles large quantities to put up 100% of the value of the hedged commodity. The exchange grants margin discounts to those that are deemed to be “bonefied” hedgers, due to the fact that the underlying cash position is seen as collateral to secure the capital risked in the futures market.
Low margins make speculation in the futures markets very attractive, without the advantage of leverage the rate of return on most commodities would be marginal.
The exchanges are responsible for setting margin requirements, but brokerage firms have discretion to require higher deposits. Generally, the initial margin is sufficient to cover the maximum daily price fluctuations. It is not uncommon for margin requirements to fluctuate with the volatility of the market.
A maintenance level is established below the initial margin, usually 75% of the initial margin. Once a trader’s good faith deposit falls below this threshold additional funds must be deposited or positions must be liquidated. This is known as a margin call.
Orders There are several types of orders that can be placed. In order to maximize efficiency and profitability, traders must be comfortable in executing each of the following options.
Market Order:
The purpose of a market order is to execute a trade immediately at the best possible price. Such orders give traders the ability to enter or exit a trade quickly, but do not guarantee a favorable price. This order should be used when time is more valuable than price.
Limit Order:
Limit orders are used to buy or sell at a specified price or better, and will only be filled at the state price or one that is more favorable. For a sell limit order “better” means higher, for buy limit orders “better” means lower.
Stop Order:
This type of order is usually placed to close a position; its name is derived from the fact that, if placed properly, it will “stop loss” should the market go against a trader’s position. Most traders chose to place a stop order at the time that they enter a position. By definition, a sell stop will be placed below the market while a buy stop will be placed above. All orders are day orders unless specified otherwise and are canceled at the end of the trading day. By entering the order GTC (good ‘til canceled), the order will be working in each trading session until canceled by the trader.
Execution Many beginning traders are unaware of the mechanics of executing a futures trade. When you call your broker, an order ticket is completed and time stamped in order to keep accurate track of the time and specifics of each order. The broker then transmits the order to his firm’s trading desk located on the floor of the exchange either by a computerized trading platform or by phone.
The order clerk then fills out an order card, time stamps it, and hands it to a runner who will take it directly to a broker in the pit. The pit broker will execute the order by open outcry and record the execution on the card before it is given back to the runner. The runner takes the executed order back to the desk where the order clerk time stamps the card one more time before the fill is reported to your broker













