December 2000
Trading Tip:
Using Gann Squares
by Howard Arrington
The Gann Square tool in Ensign Windows is very flexible and can be used to
show trends, timing, and price levels. Gann Squares indicate possible time
and price movements from important highs and lows. A start and end
point are necessary to draw Gann Squares on a chart. Since the Gann
Squares indicate possible values for future bars, it is often useful to the
slide the chart bars to the left so there is blank space to the right of the
chart bars. To draw a Gann Square on a chart move the cursor on the chart
to the starting point. The starting point is generally an important High
or Low on the chart. Then drag the mouse to the right until a desired
ending point is reached. The start and end points will be
the corners of the square. The end point is often to the right of
the chart bars. Let's begin by looking at the tool's parameter form.
Price: A Gann Square can draw horizontal lines at
the price levels shown in the Horizontal check list. These price
levels are similar to those that could be constructed using the Fibonacci Price
Levels draw tool. Tip: Watch for trends to change directions at the
Gann Square price levels.
Time: A Gann Square can draw vertical lines at the
intervals shown in the Vertical check list. These vertical lines
are similar to those that could be constructed using the Cycles draw tool.
Tip: Watch for trends to change at the Gann Square time
intervals. A Gann Square with both horizontal price levels and
vertical time intervals is shown below.
In our example, the 1/8th, 1/4th, 3/8th,
and Midpoint parameter boxes were checked for both the Horizontal
levels and the Vertical intervals. Thus, our square is
divided both horizontally and vertically into eighths. The 3/8th and 5/8th
lines are colored red.
Another variation for the Gann Square is to check the Fan
Lines parameter which is shown checked in the parameter form example.
When the Fan Lines box is checked, the tool changes from drawing
horizontal and vertical lines to drawing Gann fans from the four corners as
shown below.
The fan lines are drawn from the corners to the same eighth
points on the square's perimeter used by the horizontal and vertical lines in
the previous example. The Horizontal check list will select the
points used by the two fans whose vertex is on the left side of the
square. The Vertical check list will select the points used by the
two fans whose vertex is on the right side of the square. A common
configuration for these fan lines would be to keep the two fans on the left
side, but eliminate the two fans on the right side by unchecking all parameter
boxes in the Vertical list except the Perimeter box.
Trading tips for predicting the timing of a turn from the
intersection of primary Gann angles were given in the July
issue of the Trading Tips newsletter. Gann fan lines also provide
price support and resistance, of which many are easy to spot in the example
chart .
Study Tip:
Cycles Tool
by Hank Dean, Key West, FL
One of the most critical aspects of successful trading is not what the
direction is or why it's happening. It is the mostly overlooked when.
The when can often be forecasted just like phases of the moon or the
tides or waves or rhythms of any kind. Using one very simple tool,
time cycles, and some common sense, you can win consistently. Without that
tool it's a crap shoot. For that reason and dozens of others, and
I've tried them all... I repeat, Ensign rocks!
In reference to the what, why, and when, and the
importance of each, please don't misunderstand me about down playing the what
and why. There are so many commonly known and used sources of what
(see oscillators and advanced indicator studies, volume etc.) As for why...
that's as easy as keeping a couple of televisions running while you trade, ie:
CNBC, Fox News, etc. They will keep you apprised of fundamentals
(government reports, election antics... argg, dominating large caps, etc.)
As to where to find more printed information on time cycles, there isn't much
out there that I've found. Do you suppose it's something the big guys
don't want you to know? Anyways, I have found bits and pieces in these
sources:
-Futures Magazine
-Bridge Trader Newspaper
-DayTraders Bulletin: Tips, Tricks & Techniques for Day Traders (www.daytradersbulletin.com)
awesome stuff.
Where is the Cycles tool in Ensign Windows? Click the Draw Tools
button (3rd from the right). The Cycles button is the 2nd
button from the right, in the 2nd row down, right next to Daily Price Lines.
As you pass your cursor over it, the hint 'Cycles' pops up. When you click
on it, the cursor changes to a pencil. You can and probably will run a few
cycles at a time. I recommend that you color them differently, and always
start by placing the ones you're least likely to adjust later, as you'll
generally only be able to manually move the last one you lay down.
Try this: Open the March e-mini Nasdaq contract 1-minute chart (eSignal
users: NQ H1). It's all you'll need for this example. Now try
this... place your pencil cursor exactly on the 8:02 a.m. EST top on Dec 12th,
holding the left mouse button down... drag the pencil to the right and when
you're on top of the 8:25 a.m. EST bottom release the mouse button. If you
screwed it up just hit delete and do it again. Now look where the
repeating cycles land: 8:47, 9:08, 9:29 etc. Do you see how they
have approximately identified those small bottoms? Now for the big
news. Now look after the bell, where this pre-opening bell homework really
counts. IT PRECISELY IDENTIFIED THE 9:50 AM BOTTOM... AND AGAIN, THE SMALL TOP
AT 10:11 AM... AND AGAIN THE TOP AT AROUND 10:33!!!!! Now combine that
with On Balance Volume, MACD and Stochastics, etc. See illustration below.
Every day I check the pre-bell market first, then extend them forward after
the bell. Then I lay down a permanent 22 minute cycle from 9:30 am (the
bell) onward. After the bell I start tracking reversals as I trade and
make subtle modifications.
Understand 2 things:
1. Cycles don't have to reverse the trend every time, they can be skipped
sometimes just causing a little hiccup and sometimes nothing visible at
all and two or three can be skipped only to be resumed down the road (pre-bell
cycles in particular).
2. You will notice that many times the market will trade with a lot of
volatility right on the cycle turning point... streaking up (or down) to form a
peak (or trough), only to reverse quickly forming a sharp spike. This ends
up being the top (or bottom)... these are my favorites, what a rush! On
the other hand... a cycle can be a catalyst... acting to push or accelerate
the current trend appreciably in the same direction.
Now remember, cycles don't tell you the what or the why, you have plenty
of other tools for that. It only says "LOOK BUCKO, SOMETHING IS
PROBABLY GOING TO HAPPEN HERE>>>." That's what it's good for
and as far as I know that's all that it does, but it's enough. Give
yourself a few weeks using cycles before you start relying on them heavily.
One neat thing about using time cycles is that it gets you thinking about the
past and the future in a different way. It got me graphically tracking the
small and large reversals every day early on, when they happened, how many
points the move was and so forth. And it's amazing how trading
days repeat themselves again and again in the same and subsequent weeks.
Case in point: Take a look at the morning lows (reversals) on Dec. 7th
(9:46 am), 8th (9:49 am) and then again yesterday the 11th (9:40 am) and
then again finally today Dec. 12th (9:50 am)... pretty cool eh?
If you haven't guessed by now, I'm geared toward index futures specifically
the e-mini Nasdaq contract, and yes, you should be trading March
(H) right now... unless you enjoy being crushed, and eaten for lunch.
I like the NQ H1 because it's really fast and enormously profitable when trading
between 9:00 - 11:30 am (the only time I trade).
But you must (unless you are very well healed) use very tight stops...
sometimes placing your protective stop even before your market entry limit
order. 1 or 2 winners and I'm out for the day... no hanging around all day
in a sideways market... but that's me.
Here are some of my personal observations (for NQ), I'll kick my own butt
later for making them known:
- Cycles are all about trial and error... always.
- Cycles, like Stochastics or anything else are only guidelines.
- 22-minute cycles from the opening bell forward... every day. Be
conscious of the 11-minute cycle as a rule.
- Some times cycles run top-top, top-bottom, bottom-bottom... just try different
combos.
- For the Nasdaq, use the contract 1-minute chart, not the index.
- Look at the long-term and short term (last hour) before the bell, then watch
the 1st reversal after the bell, 2nd, 3rd.
- Every day is different, but usually once cycles are set up they are
reliable. Don't trade on days that they don't.
- Usually as of 11:30 a.m. EST, your current cycles will usually go into the
toilet, look for a new set starting around 1 p.m. EST (This is true of
most of the studies, because of low volume generally).
- Go to www.cme.com and download MarketSound,
use it in conjunction with your cycles, it's killer.
- Get ready to kick yourself at the end of the day as you look back on the day--
for not trusting the cycles you had set up earlier. It pays to be
patient... the market will still be there tomorrow, even if you're not, get my
meaning?
- Get ready to be floored at what you see, on a daily basis, but
remember, cycles are guidelines like anything else,
- DO NOT BET THE FARM ON CYCLES UNTIL YOU ARE PRACTICED.
- DO NOT IGNORE YOUR OTHER INDICATORS BECAUSE YOU FOUND CYCLES. Compelling
as they are, Cycles are is just one more tool.
- Watch how cycles coincide with trend lines, speed lines, support &
resistance levels, open/high/low and lock-limit-down levels, and a host of other
studies. Combined together, they tell a story (as my brother puts it).
Good Trading
Trading Tip:
Stop Loss Indicator
by Jerry Cohen -- jerrmar@earthlink.net -- 562-596-7528
After reading your January article on forward-shifted moving averages, I
tried to see if single moving averages could effectively be used to stop
losses. The advantage to a forward-shifted moving average, averaged over a
small number of bars and used directly as a stop-loss indicator, is that it
clings close to your bar plot, yet it moves up and down with the bars, helping
to prevent you from getting kicked out unnecessarily.
This is one possibility I have been toying with: Gann makes a point that
plotting the close doesn't do you much good because it is the high or low that
gets you stopped out. Therefore, as a stop-loss or entry method, use high
and low n-bar moving averages shifted forward m bars. n
can be 1 and it works pretty well. I find n=3 and m=3 to be
good numbers for the S&P e-mini chart with 5-minute bars, during up or down
moves. Ensign software makes charting easy. You color the moving
average of highs shifted forward green. You color the moving average of
lows shifted forward red.
Now, for employing these averages as stops, use candlesticks with the simple
trend indicator so they will be colored red and green. When a green hollow
candle passes or is cut by the green moving average line go long. Don't if the
candle is green filled or if just the wick of the candle is touching the green
line. When a red filled candle passes or is cut by the red moving average
line go short. Don't if the candle is hollow red or if just the wick of
the candle is touching the red line. Do nothing if a red candle crosses
the green line or a green candle crosses the red line.
This system works fine for trends but whipsaws you out of your money during
horizontal moves. Nevertheless, this system can at least help you see when
you are in a horizontal move. An up or down trend is characterized by the
space between the red and green lines being largely empty. A horizontal
move is usually characterized by the space between the red and green lines
having bars. Or the space above the green line and below the red line can
also have bars, particularly when the chart has narrow bar ranges and multiple
gaps due to low volume.
One of the nice things about this method is that the two averages can be
plotted with Ensign Windows without any special ESPL program. You use
simple moving averages. You set your first average to use a High
data point, and make the color of the first moving average green. Make the
parameter for the 2nd line a 1 so the second line for this object is not
plotted.
Then you add a second moving average object, setting it to use the Low data
point. Set the first moving average color red and the 2nd line parameter a
1. This gives you a green moving average of highs and a red moving average
of lows, both shifted forward the amount you choose.
If down moves for your market are characterized by a high degree of
oscillation and up moves are typically smoother, you can set the parameters for
the green and red lines differently. You can accommodate the differences in the
way the chart moves up and down so you don't get thrown out of a move
prematurely. Another refinement would be to use offsets to shift the green
moving average line up and the red line down, but I haven't found any need for
this yet.
Hope this is helpful to someone.
Meet Other Traders:
Ira Tunik writes: "I have been involved in the markets since
1958. An investor until 1970 when I became a broker for Dean Witter.
When the Pacific Options Exchange opened I bought a seat and started trading my
own account. I retired in 1985. Trading is one of the worlds great
narcotics. It is very addictive. After leaving the floor I started
trading my own account as an upstairs trader. I developed a system for
trading stocks, indexes and futures and traded successfully until the mid 1990s
when I had triple by-pass surgery.
Since then my trading has been restricted for health reasons, but I was
coaxed into teaching. I have been teaching people to trade for the past
few years. I have used Ensign since 1989 and found it then, as now, one of
the best programs on the market. I don’t use ESPL, or the majority of
the tools available, as my trading style is KISS. The main thing that I
like about Ensign is the ability to overlay the indicators over price and the
multiple windows. Many of the tools in Ensign Windows are very helpful in
teaching and I believe that my students have benefited from Ensign also, as many
have started using the program."
__________
James B. Peeke CLU/CFP writes: "I started trading commodities with
Tag group software out of New Orleans in the early 1980s. I specialize in
trading the S&P 500 stock index future contract. Ensign Software has
been very helpful in organizing my trading ideas. I find the point and
click features of the software useful. I have a number of trading ideas
based upon where I think the stock market is going. Most of my trading
ideas are intra-day.
I send out e-mail daily with an intra-day trading suggestion. I am an
Introducing Broker with Alaron Trading Corporation. I am a Non Managing
CTA. I work out of my home. I have watched markets since the early
1974 period when the Reserve Fund (the original money fund) and 44 Wall Street
Mutual Fund created a market timing switch sequence.
I find Ensign Windows enables an investor to explore an unlimited number of
possibilities in terms of trading ideas. An investor can create as complex
or simple a trading sequence as desired. You can decide to play checkers
or chess. :)
My experience has been that when I back test an idea, then apply it to
trading, something changes, and the idea fails to work. I have gone around
and around trying to figure out what causes the shift. I have come up with
the idea that price discounts news, and then on the release of news, significant
highs and lows occur. The biggest moves come when news is misinterpreted,
or catches the market by surprise. Not necessarily an original idea. :)
The idea of squaring price and time might mean something different to the
next guy, but I have found the tools which count the bars to the right of
significant price & momentum highs and lows; and the tools which measure fib
ratios allow me to measure price movement from both Momentum study extremes and
price extremes. When I find the fib ratios, and a loss of momentum, then I
look for a change in direction, or the acceleration of the trend after a
retracement.
I watch the news at 7:30 and 9:00 Central Time for the bond and @ES1H
response to significant governmental news releases. Frequently price
adjusts radically to that information.
Howard, I appreciate your efforts to meet the software needs of traders with
a wide range of interests. It allows a beginner to expand their interests
as needed. It is sort of a cross pollination idea for your software users.
Thanks again for your thoughtful design of this great software.
P.S. Because you are so well connected, I thought you might get the
following message to Santa. Come to think of it, these rules could also
apply to a trader! :)
THE RULES OF FLYING
1. Every takeoff is optional. Every landing is mandatory.
2. If you push the stick forward, the houses get bigger. If you pull the
stick back, they get smaller. That is, unless you keep pulling the stick
all the way back, then they get bigger again.
3. Flying isn't dangerous. Crashing is what's dangerous.
4. It's always better to be down here wishing you were up there than up there
wishing you were down here.
5. The ONLY time you have too much fuel is when you're on fire.
6. The propeller is just a big fan in front of the plane used to keep the pilot
cool. When it stops, you can actually watch the pilot start sweating.
7. When in doubt, hold on to your altitude. No one has ever collided
with the sky.
8. A 'good' landing is one from which you can walk away. A 'great'
landing is one after which they can use the plane again.
9. Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make
all of them yourself.
10. You know you've landed with the wheels up if it takes full power to taxi
to the ramp.
11. The probability of survival is inversely proportional to the angle of
arrival. Large angle of arrival, small probability of survival and vice
versa.
12. In the ongoing battle between objects made of aluminum going hundreds of
miles per hour and the ground going zero miles per hour, the ground has yet to
lose.
13. Good judgment comes from experience. Unfortunately, the experience
usually comes from bad judgment.
14. It's always a good idea to keep the pointy end going forward as much as
possible.
15. Remember, gravity is not just a good idea. It's the law. And it's
not subject to appeal.
16. Keep looking around. There's always something you've missed.
17. The three most useless things to a pilot are the altitude above you,
runway behind you, and a tenth of a second ago.
18. Helicopters can't fly; they're just so ugly the earth repels them.
19. Never let an aircraft take you somewhere your brain didn't get to five
minutes earlier.
20. Stay out of clouds. The silver lining everyone keeps talking about
might be another airplane going in the opposite direction.
Reliable sources also report that mountains have been known to hide out in
clouds.
21. Always try to keep the number of landings you make equal to the number of
take offs you've made.
22. There are three simple rules for making a smooth landing. Unfortunately no
one knows what they are.
23. You start with a bag full of luck and an empty bag of experience.
The trick is to fill the bag of experience before you empty the bag of luck.
24. If all you can see out of the window is ground that's going round and
round and all you can hear is commotion coming from the passenger compartment,
things are not at all as they should be
AND FINALLY,
25. When in doubt, take AMTRAK. They may crash more, but they don't have
to fall before they do!"
__________
David Jameson writes: "I am known on-line as Magnatizer.
Reason being I have a homebrewed TA method I named Magnets. My website has
more information in that regard: http://www.geocities.com/magnatizer/.
My current focus for trading vehicle is the index tracking shares and options
based on them. I track many indexes and a few stocks on my site on a daily
basis. I like to combine my magnets with fib based chart patterns and a
few indicators. Ensign's Fibonacci tools are the easiest I have
used. I love a good deal and Ensign meets that requirement ten fold!
Happy Holidays, Magnatizer" __________
Frank O'Farrell writes: " Hi Everyone, I have been listening to
MarketSound as an aid to my e-mini trading for the past two months on a free
trial basis while they were testing it, and I find it is something I feel I
cannot do without. Mr. Brown at MarketSound told me that after this test
the service would be available from January 1st. 2001 for a fee of about
$15 per Month and that I could get it through eSignal or Ensign Software.
I already use Ensign Software with eSignal and I strongly endorse this live
voice service. With a simple intercom system around my house I know
what the market is doing all the time, and I am not trapped in front of a
monitor all day until I reach my objective in a trade. It frees me up
to do research or chores while keeping bang up to the second on the
market. You can e-mail Mr. Brown at rbrown@marketsound.com
Futures day traders will find it invaluable and very reasonably priced,
including me. P.S. I am not affiliated with MarketSound in any way, I just
want to have an easier and fairly stress free trading career."
|