1-2-3 HIGHS AND LOWS
A typical 1-2-3 high is formed at the end of an
up-trending market. Typically, prices will make a final
high (1), proceed downward to point (2) where an upward
correction begins; then proceed upward to a point where
they resume a downward movement, thereby creating the
pivot (3). There can be more than one bar in the
movement from point 1 to point 2, and again from point 2
to point 3. There must be a full correction before
points 2 or 3 can be defined.
A number 1 high is created when a previous up-move
has ended and prices have begun to move down.
The number 1 point is identified as the last bar to
have made a new high in the most recent up-leg of the
latest swing.
The number 2 point of a 1-2-3 high is created when a
full correction takes place. Full correction means that
as prices move up from the potential number 2 point,
there must be a single bar that makes both a higher high
and a higher low than the preceding bar or a combination
of up to three bars creating both the higher high and
the higher low. The higher high and the higher low may
occur in any order. Subsequent to three bars we have
congestion. Congestion will be explained in depth later
on in the course. It is possible for both the number 1
and number 2 points to occur on the same bar.
The number 3 point of a 1-2-3 high is created when a
full correction takes place. A full correction means
that as prices move down from the potential number 3
point, there must be at least a single bar, but not more
than two bars that form a lower low and a lower high
than the preceding bar. It is possible for both the
number 2 and number 3 points to occur on the same bar.
Now, let’s look at a 1-2-3 low.
A typical 1-2-3 low is formed at the end of a
down-trending market. Typically, prices will make a
final low (1); proceed upward to point (2) where a
downward correction begins; then proceed downward to a
point where they resume an upward movement, thereby
creating the pivot (3). There can be more than one bar
in the movement from point 1 to point 2, and again from
point 2 to point 3. There must be a full correction
before points 2 or 3 can be defined.
A number 1 low is created when a previous down-move
has ended and prices have begun to move up. The number 1
point is identified as the last bar to have made a new
low in the most recent down-leg of the latest swing.
The number 2 point of a 1-2-3 low is created when a
full correction takes place. Full correction means that
as prices move down from the potential number 2 point,
there must be a single bar that makes both a lower high
and a lower low than the preceding bar, or a combination
of up to three bars creating both the lower high and the
lower low. The lower high and the lower low may occur in
any order. Subsequent to three bars we have congestion.
It is possible for both the number 1 and number 2 points
to occur on the same bar.
The number 3 point of a 1-2-3 low exists
when a full correction takes place. A full correction
means that as prices move up from the potential number 3
point, there must be at least a single bar, but not more
than two bars, that form a higher low and a higher high
than the preceding bar. It is possible for both the
number 2 and number 3 points to occur on the same bar.
The entire 1-2-3 high or low is nullified when any
price bar moves prices equal to or beyond the number 1
point.
Ledges
A LEDGE CONSISTS OF A MINIMUM OF FOUR PRICE
BARS. IT MUST HAVE TWO MATCHING LOWS AND TWO MATCHING
HIGHS. THE MATCHING HIGHS MUST BE SEPARATED BY AT LEAST
ONE PRICE BAR, AND THE MATCHING LOWS MUST BE SEPARATED
BY AT LEAST ONE PRICE BAR.
The matches need not be exact, but should not differ
by more than three minimum tick fluctuations. If there
are more than two matching highs and two matching lows,
then it is optional whether to take an entry signal from
either the latest price matches in the series (Match
‘A’) or those that represent the highest and lowest
prices of the series (Match ‘B’). [See below]
A LEDGE CANNOT CONTAIN MORE THAN 10 PRICE
BARS. A LEDGE MUST EXIST WITHIN A TREND. The
market must have trended up to the Ledge or down to the
Ledge. The Ledge represents a resting point for prices,
therefore you would expect the trend to continue
subsequent to a Ledge breakout.
TRADING RANGES
A Trading Range (See below) is similar to a Ledge,
but must consist of more than ten price bars. The bars
between ten and twenty are of little consequence.
Usually, between bars 20 and 30, i.e., bars 21-29, there
will be a breakout to the high or low of the Trading
Range established by those bars prior to the breakout.
ROSS HOOKS
A Ross Hook is created by:
1. The first correction following the breakout of a
1-2-3 high or low.
2. The first correction following the breakout of a
Ledge.
3. The first correction following the breakout of a
Trading Range.
In an up-trending market, after the breakout of a
1-2-3 low, the first instance of the failure of a price
bar to make a new high creates a Ross Hook. (A double
high/double top also creates a Ross Hook).
In a down-trending market, after the breakout of a
1-2-3 high, the first instance of the failure of a price
bar to make a new low creates a Ross Hook. (A double
low/double bottom also equals a Ross Hook).
If prices breakout to the upside of a Ledge or a
Trading Range formation, the first instance of the
failure by a price bar to make a new high creates a Ross
Hook. If prices breakout to the downside of a Ledge or
Trading Range formation, the first instance of the
failure by a price bar to make a new low creates a Ross
Hook (A double high or low also creates a Ross Hook).
We’ve defined the patterns that make up the Law of
Charts. Study them carefully.
What makes these formations unique is
that they can be specifically defined. The ability to
formulate a precise definition sets these formations
apart from such vague generalities as “head and
shoulders,” “coils,” “flags,” “pennants,” “megaphones,”
and other such supposed price patterns that are
frequently attached as labels to the action of prices.
TRADING IN CONGESTION
Sideways price movement may be broken into three
distinct and definable areas:
1. Ledges - consisting of no more than 10 price
bars
2. Congestions - 11-20 price bars inclusive
3. Trading Ranges - 21 bars or more with a breakout
usually occurring on price bars 21-29 inclusive.
Trading Ranges consisting of more than 29 price bars
tend to weaken beyond 29 price bars and breakouts beyond
29 price bars will be:
• Relatively strong if the Trading Range has been
growing narrower from top to bottom (coiling).
• Relatively weak if the Trading Range has been
growing wider from top to bottom (megaphone).
We have written considerable material about breakouts
from Ledges, primarily that since by definition, Ledges
must occur in trending markets, the breakout is best
traded in the direction of the prior trend, once two
matching highs and two matching lows have taken place.
The next discussion deals primarily with Congestions
and Trading Ranges:
Under the topic of the Law of Charts, we have defined
the first correction following the breakout of a Trading
Range or Ledge as being a Ross Hook.
The same is true after a breakout from Congestion,
i.e., the first retracement (correction) following a
breakout from Congestion also constitutes a Ross Hook.
A problem most traders have in dealing with sideways
markets is determining when prices are no longer moving
sideways and have indeed begun to trend. Apart from an
outright breakout and correction which defines a Ross
Hook, how is it possible to detect when a market is no
longer moving sideways, and has begun to trend?
In other writings, we have stated that the breakout
of the number 2 point of a 1-2-3 high or low formation
‘defines’ a trend, and that the breakout of the point of
a subsequent Ross Hook ‘establishes’ the trend
previously defined.
1-2-3 high and low formations may be satisfactorily
traded using the Trader’s Trick entry. All Ross Hooks
may be satisfactorily traded using the Trader’s Trick
entry.
However, while a 1-2-3 formation occurring in a
sideways market still defines a trend, the 1-2-3
formation, when it occurs in a sideways market, is not
satisfactorily traded using the Trader’s Trick. This is
because Congestions and Trading Ranges are usually
composed of opposing 1-2-3 high and low formations.
If a sideways market has assumed an /\/\ formation,
or is seen as a \/\/ formation, these formations will
more often than not consist of a definable 1-2-3 low
followed by a 1-2-3 high, or a 1-2-3 high followed by a
1-2-3 low. In any event, the breakout of the number 2
point is usually not a spectacular event, certainly not
one worth trading.
What is needed is a tie-breaker. The tie-breaker will
not only increase the likelihood of a successful trade,
but will also be a strong indicator of the direction the
breakout will most probably take. That tie-breaker is
the Ross Hook.
When a market is moving sideways, the trader must see
a 1-2-3 formation, followed by a Ross Hook, all
occurring within the sideways price action. The entry is
then best attempted by using the Trader’s Trick ahead of
a breakout of the point of the Ross Hook.
Of course, nothing works every time. There will be
false breakouts. However, on a statistical basis, a
violation of a Ross Hook occurring when price action is
sideways, consistently results in a low risk entry with
a heightened probability for success. Since the
violation of a Ross Hook occurring in a sideways market
is an acceptable trade, then an entry based upon a
Trader’s Trick entry ahead of the point of the Ross Hook
being violated offers an even better entry.
POINTS OF CLARIFICATION
FOR 1-2-3 FORMATIONS
We have had a number of people ask about the trading
of the 1-2-3 high or low formation.
They ask, “When do you buy and when do you sell?”
Although we prefer to use the Trader’s Trick entry
whenever possible (See Appendix B), the illustration
should be of help when not using the Trader’s Trick.
The Breakout of a 1-2-3 High Or Low
Let's illustrate what a 1-2-3 is:
Sell a breakout of the # 2 point of a
1-2-3 high
===============================================
Buy a breakout of the # 2 point of a
1-2-3 low
Note: The #3 point does not come down as low as the #1
point in a uptrend, or as high as the #1 point in a down
trend.
We set a mental or computer alert, or both, to warn us
of an impending breakout of these key points. We will
not enter a trade if prices gap over our entry point. We
will enter it only if the market trades through our
entry point.
1-2-3 Highs and Lows come only at market turning
points that are in effect major or intermediate high or
lows. We look for 1-2-3 lows when a market seems to be
making a bottom, or has reached a 50% or greater
retracement. We look for 1-2-3 highs when a market
appears to be making a top, or has reached a 50% or
greater retracement.
Exact entry will always be at or prior to the actual
breakout taking place.
POINTS OF CLARIFICATION
FOR ROSS HOOKS
We are asked the same question with regard to the
Ross Hook as we are about 1-2-3 formations: “When do I
buy, and when do I sell?” Our answer is essentially the
same as for the 1-2-3 formation. Although we prefer
entry via the Trader’s Trick (See Appendix B), such
entry is not always available. When the Trader’s Trick
entry is not available, enter on a breakout of the point
of the Ross Hook itself.
Buy on a breakout of the point of the
Ross Hook.
But keep in mind this warning: When the point of a Ross
Hook is taken out, it very often is nothing more than
stop running, and the breakout will be a false one.
Sell on a breakout of the point of the
Ross Hook.
Some comments about the series of graphs that follow
might clear up a few questions:
This is important! Prices make a double top at the
last Ross Hook shown, and then retreat. Many
professional traders would go short as soon as they felt
the double top was in place.
Notice that we are able to connect a True Trend line
from the point of the lower Ross Hook to the correction
low that gave us the #3 point, and then to the
correction low that created the double top Ross hook.
That leaves us with a 1-2-3 low and a Ross Hook in
the event of a breakout to the upside. It also leaves us
with a 1-2-3 high and a Ross hook in the event of a
breakout to the downside. A breakout of the double top
(Rh) will set us up for any subsequent upside Ross Hooks
if prices take out the double resistance area and then
later correct.
The double top Ross Hook represents a low risk entry
for a short position. However, in this example we will
wait for an entry at the violation of the Ross Hook
itself. A more advanced trader might wish to go short as
prices move away from the double top. This is a low risk
trade because a stop can temporarily be placed above the
high. Notice we are saying temporarily. The double top
could be a terrible place to have a stop should the
insiders engineer a move up to run the stops they know
are there.
The Trader’s Trick Entry (See Appendix B) would
enable us to enter by going long earlier than waiting
for the double top Ross Hook to be taken out. The more
conservative trade is to use the Trader’s Trick entry,
figuring that prices will at least test the high as
prices move up. The Trader’s Trick Entry in this case is
just above the third bar of correction. All or part of
the position can be put on at the Trader’s Trick Entry
point. It’s simply a matter of choice. If you want to
know what our choice is, it is to place the entire
position on at the Trader’s Trick Entry.
However, prices continue down and take out the lower
Ross Hook. We should have had a resting sell stop below
that Ross Hook as well. We can sell short all or part of
our position as the lower Ross Hook itself is violated.
We see that prices are plunging. However, we should
not be jumping in front of the market at each lower bar,
because by the time prices take out the Ross Hook, the
market will have already been moving down for four
consecutive bars. If you will recall the lessons learned
from our section in ELECTRONIC TRADING ‘TNT’ I on
finding the trend while it is still in the birth canal,
you know that the market may be getting ready to
correct.
Note the intraday correction at the arrow on the
right of the chart. An important event has taken place.
The intraday correction makes it okay to jump in front
of the market. The fact that the market opened, traded
above the previous bar’s high, and then took out the
previous day’s low, signifies at least one more good day
to be short. If trading intraday, jump in front of the
Ross Hook created by the intraday correction. In fact,
if trading intraday, and it becomes available, use a
Trader’s Trick Entry to enter ahead of prices taking out
the previous day’s low.
We now have an intraday correction followed by a
reversal bar. The market is talking! Note the gap open
beyond the previous bar’s low. Then notice the price
action for the remainder of the day. Professional
traders will go long on a gap open like that, some of
them as soon as possible after the open, and others when
prices trade through the open to the upside. When you
see a gap open like that in a strongly trending market,
take profits. If your guts are under control, take
profits and reverse. Most of the time you will be glad
you did. In fact, many professionals, if they think the
market is beginning to congest, will double up on a gap
opening and trade twice as many contracts against the
trend as they would with the trend.
The market was telling us to expect a correction. Were
you listening?
When prices are correcting and prices open in the
upper part of the previous bar’s range, and then move
above the previous bar’s high, chances are you haven’t
seen an end to the correction.
This latest price bar places the chart into a 5 bar
consolidation area. We’ll place a box around that area.
This area is considered to be congestion by alternation
and is described in Electronic Trading ‘TNT’ III –
Technical Trading Stuff, and in Appendix C of this
manual.
Although not shown, you can picture that a 3x3 moving
average of the close, is running through the middle of
the 5 bar congestion.
You may recall from ELECTRONIC TRADING ‘TNT’ III that
the 3x3 moving average is a filter for Reverse Ross
Hooks. It is also a filter here for the same reasons –
we are in a defined congestion by reason of alternation.
Since the trade doesn’t pass our filter because of a
“gap opening beyond the low of the Rh,” we must remove
any order to sell a breakout of the Rh. The gap opening
below the previous bar’s range has brought in a double
load of orders from the insiders.
Prices move up on a reversal day. Remember, when the
insiders feel that a market is congesting or correcting,
they will double their orders on openings that gap
beyond the price range of the previous day. This
doubling can serve as a filter for our trades, because
we can expect the insiders to try to fill the gap. Day
traders can use this to trade right along with the
insiders who know to expect this type of price action.
As prices gap past the Rh, and then correct, we can
place a sell order below the new Rh.
The following day, we get a gap opening to the
upside. This time it is above the high of the previous
day. It, too, will bring a double load of sell short
orders. This is a correction day and so we can connect
some segment lines.
Prices hit our sell stop below the Rh. Our sell stop
has been placed one tick below the point of the Rh. We
want a violation of the Hook before we will accept
entry.
There are many problems with getting filled on a gap
opening below our sell stop, the least of which is
slippage. Therefore, if at all possible, we do not enter
orders until we see where the open occurs. Brokers can
be instructed in that manner if you have to use one for
the actual placement of your order. On the chart to the
left, prices opened exactly one tick below the Rh.
The next price bar makes an unusual
close. We must do all we can to protect profits. There
is apt to be further correction on the next price bar.
We protect profits by moving our stop one tick above
the high of any bar that closes very close to the high
when we feel that prices should be continuing to move
down.
The correction comes intraday, creating an intraday
hook situation. Day traders may have been able to scalp
a few ticks of profit here.
Day traders may have been able to profit by selling
under the low of the previous day. Any day trader at any
time should consider a breakout of the low of the
previous day a strong reason to sell short.
The correction by prices on the last bar shown gives
us another Rh.
As prices correct, we try to sell a breakout of the
low of the correcting bar.
The following comments apply to the chart above and
the one below. We may want to put on our entire position
but we have only two opportunities. It may be best to
put on 2/3 of the position at the higher of the two
entry points, and only 1/3 at the hook, if we are given
the choice. Once prices start back down, we try for 2/3
immediately. If we still cannot get our position on,
then we will have to place the entire position on at the
hook. You may recall in a similar situation we looked at
the 3x3 moving average of the close and considered it a
filter for the trade because the 3x3 was running through
a five bar consolidation. In this instance, the 3x3
moving average was still displaying containment of the
downtrend.
A trade at the low is missed because of the gap
opening. We then try to sell a breakout of the next low,
as well as the Rh.
Our position is filled at both entry points.
The following comments apply to the chart above and
the chart below: As we take profits out of the market,
we come to a point where we have accumulated sufficient
profits that if we wish to risk those profits, we can
begin to keep our stop further away from the price
action.
If we don’t want to take additional risk, then it’s
best to trail a 50% stop as the market moves down, and
pull stops even tighter on reversal bars, or any
indication that something is amiss.
Because of the reversal bar, we tighten stops. We
don’t want a win to turn into a loss.
Another intraday correction gives day traders an
opportunity to sell short.
All traders can jump in front of the market and get
filled as the low is taken out.
Prices break nicely to the downside.
The downtrend is fully intact. If we are willing to
take more risk, we can allow our stop to lag further
back.
Here we see the value in keeping our trailing stop a
bit further away, once we have established acceptable
profits.
In any case, we would place a sell stop below the Rh
and the next correction bar, in effect opting for the
Trader’s Trick.
We now have three possible selling points. Whenever
we get 3 bars of correction, we move our lagging stop
(if we have one) to one tick above the high of the third
correction bar. This is because, if we were to get more
than three correcting bars, we would have to assume that
the trend is at least temporarily over, and prices may
now move higher, or at the very least move into a
congestion phase.
The gap open misses our highest entry point. Because
it does, it would cause us to try to fill 2/3rds of our
position on a breakout of the low of the gap down bar.
Once again the entry point was missed on the gap
opening. We will try again for entry on the next price
bar.
This bar brings a fill near the close.
At this point our entire position should be in place.
We do not need a sell order below the Rh if our
entire position is in place.
Note with regard to the last four charts: An adequate
trailing stop would have kept us in the market
throughout the four days show on these charts. We would
have been able to build a position by adding contracts.
But keep in mind that adding contracts also adds all
new risk. Furthermore, the risk which is incurred may be
greater in nature than the risk originally accepted.
Why? Because each time we add to our position, we are
closer in time to the end of the move being made.
The method of trade management that we have been
showing you in this entire series of charts is here is
to demonstrate to you an alternative method of trade
management. It is up to the trader to decide how to
manage his/her own positions. In our minds there are two
basic approaches, both of which may be acceptable to
some.
The first is that of putting on the entire position upon
the initial entry and then liquidating portions of that
position to cover costs, take a small profit, and
finally to ride the trade as far as it will go with what
remains of the position after partial liquidation.
The converse of this method is to build the position
by entering a portion of it to test the waters. If the
initial portion becomes profitable, you then add to the
position by adding contractss in stages until you have
put on the entire position.
Much of any acceptability depends upon your personal
comfort level in handling risk, and your financial
capacity for handling risk.
We’ll look at two more charts now. In actuality, the
market continued downward for quite some time after the
last chart below.
Here we see a reversal day. By now you should know
that it usually means some sort of correction is due.
Sure enough, prices correct. We would start by trying
to sell a breakout of the correction low. We would also
place a sell stop below the Rh for part of our position.
Remember, it is up to you to decide how much of your
position you want to place at any given level. It is a
matter of comfort and style. Where do you feel best
about placing your entry orders?
THE TRADER'S TRICK ONE MORE TIME
The purpose of the Trader's Trick entry (TTE) is to
get us into a trade prior to entry by other traders.
Let's be realistic. Trading is a business in which
the more knowledgeable have the advantage over the less
knowledgeable. It's a shame that most traders end up
spending countless hours and dollars searching for and
acquiring the wrong kind of knowledge. Unfortunately,
there is a ton of misinformation out there and it is
heavily promoted. What we are trying to avoid here is
the damage that can be done by a false breakout.
Typically, there will be many orders bunched just
beyond the point of a Ross Hook. This is also true of
the number two point of a 1-2-3 formation. The insiders
are very much aware of the bunching of orders at those
points, and if they can make it happen, they will move
prices to where they see the orders bunched together,
and then a little past that point in order to liquidate
as much of their own position as possible. This action
by the insiders is called “stop running.”
Unless the pressure from the outsiders (us) is
sufficient to carry the market to a new level, the
breakout will prove to be false.
The Trader's Trick is designed to beat the insiders
at their own game, or at the very least to create a
level playing field on which we can trade. WHEN
TRADING HOOKS, WE WANT TO GET IN AHEAD OF THE ACTUAL
BREAKOUT OF THE POINT OF THE HOOK. IF THE BREAKOUT IS
NOT FALSE, THE RESULT WILL BE SIGNIFICANT PROFITS. IF
THE BREAKOUT IS FALSE, WE WILL HAVE AT LEAST COVERED OUR
COSTS AND TAKEN SOME PROFIT FOR OUR EFFORT.
Insiders will often engineer moves aimed at precisely
those points where they realize orders are bunched. It
is exactly that kind of engineering that makes the
Trader's Trick possible.
The best way to explain the engineering by the
insiders is to give an example. Ask the following
question: If we were large operators down on the floor,
and we wanted to make the market move sufficiently for
us to take a fat profit out of the market, and know that
we could liquidate easily at a higher level than where
the market now is because of the orders bunched there,
how would we engineer such a move?
We would begin by bidding slightly above
the market.
By bidding a large number of contracts
above the market, prices would quickly move up to our
price level.
Once again by bidding a large number of
contracts at a higher level, prices would move up to
that next level.
The sudden movement up by prices, to
meet our large-order overpriced-bid, will cause others
to take notice. The others are day traders trading from
a screen, and even insiders.
Their buy orders will help in moving the market
upward towards where the stops are bunched. It doesn't
matter whether this is a daily chart or a five minute
chart, the principle is the same.
In order to maintain the momentum, we may have to place
a few more buy orders above the market, but we don't
mind. We know there are plenty of orders bunched above
the high point. These buy orders will help us fill our
liquidating sell orders when it's time for us to make a
hasty exit.
Who has placed the buy orders above the market? The
outsiders, of course. They are made up of two groups.
One group are those who went short sometime after the
high was made, and feel that above the high point is all
they are willing to risk. The other group are those
outsiders who feel that if the market takes out that
high, they want to be long.
Because of the action of our above-the-market
bidding, accompanied by the action of other inside
traders and day traders, the market begins to make a
strong move up. The move up attracts the attention of
others, and the market begins to move up even more
because of new buying coming into the market.
This kind of move has nothing whatsoever to do with
supply and demand. It is purely contrived and
engineered.
Once the market nears the high, practically everyone
wants in on this “miraculous” move in the market. Unless
there is strong buying by the outsiders, the market will
fail at or shortly after reaching the high. This is
known as a buying climax.
What will cause this failure? Selling. By whom? By us as
big operators, and all the other insiders who are
anxious to take profits. At the very least, the market
will make some sort of intraday hesitation shortly after
the high is reached.
If there is enough buying to overcome all the
selling, the market will continue up. If not, the
insiders will have a wonderful time selling the market
short, especially those who know this was an engineered
move. NOTE: DON’T THINK FOR ONE MOMENT THAT
THERE IS NOT COLLUSION BY INSIDERS TO MANIPULATE PRICES.
What will happen is that not only will selling be
done for purposes of liquidation, but also for purposes
of reversing position and going short. This means the
selling at the buying climax may be close to triple the
amount it would normally be if there were only profit
taking.
Why triple? Because if prices were engineered upward
by a large operator whose real intention is to sell, he
will need to sell one set of contracts to liquidate all
of his buying, and perhaps double that number in order
to get short the amount of contracts he originally
intended to sell.
The buying from the outsiders will have to overcome that
additional selling.
Because of that fact, the charts will attest to a
false breakout. Of course, the reverse scenario is true
of a downside engineered move resulting in a false
breakout to the downside.
WARNING: MOVING THE MARKET AS SHOWN IN THE
PREVIOUS EXAMPLE IS NOT SOMETHING THE AVERAGE TRADER
SHOULD ATTEMPT!
It is very important to realize what may be happening
when a market approaches a Ross Hook after having been
in a congestion area for awhile. The prior pages have
illustrated this concept.
With the preceding information in mind, let's see how
to accomplish the Trader's Trick.
On the chart above the Rh is the high. There were two
price bars following the high: one is the bar whose
failure to move higher created the Hook, and the other
is one that simply furthered the depth of the
correction.
Let’s look at that again by breaking it down in
detail in an example.
Following the high is a bar that fails to have a higher
high. This failure creates the Ross Hook, and is the
first bar of correction. If there is sufficient room to
cover costs and take a small profit in the distance
between the high of the correcting bar and the point of
the Hook, we attempt to buy a breakout of the high of
the bar that created the Hook, i.e., the first bar of
correction. If the high of the first bar of correction
is not taken out, i.e., violated, we wait for a second
bar of correction.
Once the second bar of correction is in place, we
attempt to buy a violation of its high, again provided
that there is sufficient room to cover costs and take a
profit based on the distance prices have to travel
between our entry point and the point of the Hook.
If the high of the second bar of correction is not
violated, we will attempt to buy a violation the high of
a third bar of correction provided there is sufficient
room to cover costs and take a profit based on the
distance prices have to move between our entry point and
the point of the Hook. Beyond three bars in the
correction, we will cease in our attempt to buy a
breakout of the correction highs.
What if the fourth bar did as pictured on the left?
As long as prices are moving back up in the direction of
the trend that created the Ross Hook, and as long as
there is sufficient room for us to cover costs and take
a profit, we will buy a breakout of the high of any of
the three previous correction bars. In the example, if
we were able to enter before prices violated the high of
the second bar of correction, we would enter on a
violation of the high of the second correcting price
bar. If not, and there is still room to cover and profit
from a violation of the first correcting price bar, we
would enter there. Additionally, we could choose to
enter on a takeout of the high of the latest price bar
as shown by the double arrow, even if it gaps past one
of the correction bar highs.
REMINDER: ONCE THERE ARE MORE THAN THREE BARS
OF CORRECTION, WE NO LONGER ATTEMPT TO ENTER A TRADE.
THE MARKET MUST BEGIN TO MOVE TOWARD THE HOOK AT THE
TIME OF OR BEFORE A FOURTH BAR IS MADE.
Although not shown, the exact same concept applies to
Ross Hooks formed at the end of a down move.
Risk management is based upon the expectation that
prices will go up to at least test the point of the
Hook. At that time, we will take, or already have taken
some profit and have covered costs.
We are now prepared to exit at breakeven, at the very
worst, on the remaining contracts. Barring any horrible
slippage, the worst we can do is having to exit the
trade with some sort of profit for our efforts.
We usually limit the Trader's Trick to no more than
three bars of correction following the high of the bar
that is the point of the Hook. However, there is an
important exception to this rule. The next chart shows
the use of double or triple support and resistance areas
for implementing the Trader's Trick.
Please realize that “support” and “resistance” on an
intraday chart does not have the usual meaning of those
terms when applied to the overall supply and demand in
the market place. What is referred to here is given in
the following four examples:
Any time a business can consistently make profits,
that business is going to prosper. Add to that profit
the huge amount of money made on the trades that take
off and never look back, and it’s readily apparent that
enormous profits are available from trading.
The management method we use shows why it is so
important to be properly capitalized. Size in trading
helps enormously.
The method also shows why, if we are undercapitalized
(most traders are), we must be patient and gradually
build our account by taking profits quickly when they
are there.
If you are not able to tend to your own orders
intraday electronically or on the Internet, it may be
well worth your while to negotiate with a broker who
will execute your trading plan for you. There are
brokers who will do this, and you may be surprised to
find that there are some who will perform such service
at reasonable prices if you trade regularly.
When we are trading using the Trader’s Trick, we don’t
want to be filled on a gap opening beyond our desired
entry price unless there is sufficient room for us to
still cover costs and take a profit. Can you grasp the
logic of that? The reason is that we have no way of
knowing whether a move toward a breakout is real or not.
If it is engineered, the market will move forward to the
point of taking out the order accumulations and perhaps
a few ticks more. Then the market will reverse with no
follow through in the direction of the breakout. As long
as we have left enough room between our entry point and
the point where orders are accumulated to take care of
costs and a profit, we will do no worse than breakeven.
Usually, we will also have a profit to show for any
remaining contracts, however small.
If the move proves to be real (not engineered), then the
market will give us a huge reward relative to our risk
and costs. Remember, commission and time are our only
real investment in the trade if it goes our way.
The important understanding that we need to have
about the Trader’s Trick is that by taking entry into a
market at the correct point, we can neutralize the
action by the insiders. We can be right and earn
something for our efforts should the breakout prove to
be false.
Some breakouts will be real. The fundamentals of the
market ensure that. When those breakouts happen, we will
be happy, richer traders.
With proper money management, we can earn something
for our efforts even if the breakout proves to be false.
IDENTIFYING CONGESTION
One of the concepts every trader must learn is how to
know when prices are in congestion. There are a few
rules for the early discovery of this ever important
price action, and they are explained in detail in this
chapter.
RULE: ANY TIME PRICES OPEN OR CLOSE ON FOUR
CONSECUTIVE BARS, WITHIN THE CONFINES OF THE RANGE OF A
“MEASURING BAR,” YOU HAVE CONGESTION. THIS IS REGARDLESS
OF WHERE THE HIGHS AND LOWS MAY BE LOCATED. A “MEASURING
BAR” BECOMES SUCH BY VIRTUE OF ITS PRICE RANGE
CONTAINING THE OPENS OR CLOSES OF AT LEAST 3 OF 4
SUBSEQUENT PRICE BARS.
Closely and carefully study this chart again.
Congestion can be very subtle in appearance. Often the
difference between congestion or trend is the
positioning of a single open or close.
To further demonstrate this concept, let’s first look
at the combination of points “K” through “M” on the
chart below. Even though “M” closed below the range of
the measuring bar “J,” the fact that “L” made a new high
and then closed, dropping back into the Trading Range of
“J”, tells us that prices are still in congestion. This
will be explained on the following pages. In addition,
we now have congestion by virtue of alternating bars,
which will also be discussed next.
ANY TIME PRICES ARE NOT MAKING HIGHER HIGHS AND
HIGHER LOWS, OR LOWER HIGHS AND LOWER LOWS, AND WE CAN
SEE FOUR ALTERNATING BARS, AT TIMES COUPLED WITH INSIDE
BARS AND AT TIMES COUPLED WITH DOJIS, WE HAVE
CONGESTION.
ALTERNATING BARS ARE ONES WHERE PRICES OPEN
LOWER AND CLOSE HIGHER ON ONE BAR, AND OPEN HIGHER AND
CLOSE LOWER ON THE NEXT.
Inside bars look like this:
Doji Bars look like this:
Below are more Doji bars. The open and close are at
the same price or very near to the same price, yielding
a bar that looks like this:
A combination of alternate close-high-open-low,
close-low-open-high pairs is congestion.
“Pointy” places made when the market is in congestion
are not Ross Hooks. If a trend has been defined within
congestion, you now have a trend, and any subsequent
pointy place is a Ross Hook.
The first bar of the congestion may very well be the
last bar of what had been a trend. A congestion may look
similar to any of the following, as long as it consists
of four or more bars. Study these formations carefully:
CONGESTIONS:
Frequently congestion will start or end with a doji.
Frequently congestion will begin or end with a long bar
move, or a gap.
Another way to identify congestion is when you see
/\/\ or \/\/ on the chart.
The smallest possible number of bars that can make up
this formation is four. Let’s see how this can be done.
In reality, we may get something that looks more like
the following:
If we were to get a formation that looked like the
following, the Ross Hook would be as marked. If that
Hook is taken out, we would want to be long prior to the
violation. Notice that the bar that created the Ross
Hook was the last bar of the trend and the first bar of
the congestion.
Now, let’s see if you’re really getting this. Assume
that an established trend is in effect, with prices
having trended up from much lower. We’ve changed the
chart a bit, so pay attention.
The Ross Hook is as marked below.
Note: A 1-2-3 FOLLOWED BY A BREAKOUT OF THE
#2 POINT THAT SUBSEQUENTLY RESULTS IN A ROSS HOOK,
SUPERCEDES ANY CONGESTION OR PREVIOUS ROSS HOOK. QUITE
OFTEN, SUCH A SERIES OF PRICE BAR OCCURRENCES WILL BE
THE WAY PRICES EXIT A CONGESTION AREA, I.E, A 1-2-3
FORMATION WITHIN A CONGESTION AREA, A BREAKOUT OF THE #2
POINT, FOLLOWED BY A ROSS HOOK .
The price bar labeled “b” made a new local low. The
take out by prices of the local double resistance, “a”
and “b,” is a significant event. “a” and “b”, together,
constitute the number two point of a 1-2-3 low occurring
in congestion. The low of bar “b” is also a #3 point,
and two bars later we get the highest high of the
congestion, which is also an Rh.
The new Ross Hook represents an even more significant
breakout point. Combined with the old Rh, there is
significant resistance. Within a few ticks of each
other, the two constitute a double top. If prices take
them both out, we would normally expect a relatively
longer term, strong move up.
We use the term “relatively” here, because the
intensity and the duration of the move would be relative
to the time frame in which the price bars were made.
Obviously such a move on a one minute chart would hardly
compare with an equivalent move on a daily chart. While
we are looking at the chart, there is something else of
importance to notice. Prices retreated from the
resistance point, thereby creating the second Ross Hook.
This represented a failure to break out. This failure is
why Reverse Ross hooks are important. When prices
retreat from a resistance point and move towards a RRh,
it may indicate that the only reason the resistance
point was challenged or even violated was because prices
were “engineered” in that direction by some party or
parties capable of moving prices for their own benefit.
The anticipation is that prices next may move in the
opposite direction toward a violation of the RRh.
Now, go through a brief review of the various
congestions. All of the three following conditions that
define congestion must occur without consistently making
higher highs or lower lows.
Congestion by Opens/Closes: Four
consecutive closes or opens within the range of a
measuring bar. If opens are used, there can be no
correcting bars before or coincident with the bar in
which the open is used.
Congestion by Combination: A series
of four consecutive dojis, or at least one doji and any
three alternating bars. The doji is a wild card and can
be used to alternate with any other bar. If there are
three non-doji bars, one of them must alternate
high-to-low with the other two non-doji bars.
Congestion by Alternation: A series
of four consecutive alternating open high - close low,
open low - close high bars in any sequence. This
definition includes Congestion by High/Low pairs.
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