Volume Profile, Market Profile, Order Flow - Next Generation of Daytrading
Volume Profile, Market Profile, Order Flow - Next Generation of Daytrading
Volume Profile, Market Profile, Order Flow - Next Generation of Daytrading
Market Profile
Order Flow
Johannes Forthmann
Impressum
Author: Johannes Forthmann
1. Edition
Copyright 2020, All Rights Reserved
Published by Forthmann Book Publishing, Vana-Veerenni tn4, 10135
Tallinn, Estonia
Email: [email protected]
This work is copyrighted. All rights of exploitation, also in extracts, are
reserved.
About the author
Johannes Forthmann is a German economist with more than 20 years of
experience in the Futures markets. He worked for a Swiss commodity and
asset management company.
RISK DISCLOSURE
FUTURES AND FOREX TRADING CONTAINS SUBSTANTIAL RISK AND IS NOT FOR
EVERY INVESTOR. AN INVESTOR COULD POTENTIALLY LOSE ALL OR MORE THAN THE
INITIAL INVESTMENT. RISK CAPITAL IS MONEY THAT CAN BE LOST WITHOUT
JEOPARDIZING ONES FINANCIAL SECURITY OR LIFE STYLE. ONLY RISK CAPITAL
SHOULD BE USED FOR TRADING AND ONLY THOSE WITH SUFFICIENT RISK CAPITAL
SHOULD CONSIDER TRADING. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE
OF FUTURE RESULTS.
HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE DISCLOSURE CFTC RULE 4.41
HYPOTHETICAL OR SIMULATED PERFORMANCE RESULTS HAVE CERTAIN
LIMITATIONS. UNLIKE AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE RECORD, SIMULATED RESULTS DO
NOT REPRESENT ACTUAL TRADING. ALSO, SINCE THE TRADES HAVE NOT BEEN
EXECUTED, THE RESULTS MAY HAVE UNDER-OR-OVER COMPENSATED FOR THE
IMPACT, IF ANY, OF CERTAIN MARKET FACTORS, SUCH AS LACK OF LIQUIDITY.
SIMULATED TRADING PROGRAMS IN GENERAL ARE ALSO SUBJECT TO THE FACT THAT
THEY ARE DESIGNED WITH THE BENEFIT OF HINDSIGHT. NO REPRESENTATION IS
BEING MADE THAT ANY ACCOUNT WILL OR IS LIKELY TO ACHIEVE PROFIT OR LOSSES
SIMILAR TO THOSE SHOWN. THE TRADING IDEAS AND TRADING METHODS SHOWN IN
THIS BOOK MAY HAVE WORKED IN THE PAST. PAST RESULTS ARE NOT NECESSARILY
INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. WHILE THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR PROFITS THERE
IS ALSO A HUGE RISK OF LOSS. THEREFORE IT IS ADVISED TO CONSIDER CAREFULLY
WHETHER SUCH TRADING IS SUITABLE FOR YOU WITH REGARD TO YOUR FINANCIAL
SITUATION. ALL INFORMATION IN THIS BOOK SERVES FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES
ONLY. IT DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN INSTRUCTION OR A RECOMMENDATION TO
TRADE FUTURES CONTRACTS OR FOREX. PROFESSIONAL ADVICE SHOULD BE SOUGHT
WHERE APPROPRIATE. NEITHER THE AUTHOR NOR THE PUBLISHER IS RESPONSIBLE
FOR LOSSES ARISING FROM THE USE OF THE CONTENT OF THIS BOOK.
Table of Contents
1.Introduction
2. The Advantages of Futures
3. The Market Participants
4. Market Profile - A Brief Overview
5. What is a Volume Profile?
6. Value Area
7. Forms and Shapes of Profiles
8. How to display the Profiles?
8.1 Fixed profiles
8.2 Flexible profiles
9. Bounce Backs
10. General Set ups
10.1 Accumulation and Follow-up
10.2 Reversals
11. Hardware, Software and Data Feed
12. Order Flow Analysis
12.1 Order book - DOM
12.2 Footprints - Inside the Chart
12.3 Delta
12.3.1 Absorption
12.3.2 Variants
12.3.3 Delta Numbers and Profiles
13. The Preparation
14. Liquidity and Volatility - An Important Pair
15. Characteristics of Individual Trading Instruments
16. More on Market Profile
17. Filtering the Ledge
18. Broadening Tops - a Warning Signal
19. Complete Examples
19.1 Yen
19.2 E-Mini S&P
19.3 Fdax
19.4 Bund Future
19.5 A Day with Crude Oil
19.6 Gold
19.7 Broadening Top and Ledge Filter
19.8 EURUSD
19.9 Weekly Profiles
20. Summary
21. Questions that could be asked
22. Fake Moves
22.1 Backfire Pattern
22.2 SHS Fakes
22.3 Bottom- and Top squeeze
22.4 Natural Support and Resistance Fakes
22.5 Trend line Fakes
22.6. Fake Breakouts
23. What is a Trend?
24. Trade- and Risk Management
25. Short Term Trading - A Trade Example
1. I n t ro d u c t i o n
The year 2020 has called into question the validity of medium and long-term
forecasts. If a hundred experts were to be asked where the journey in the
financial markets is heading, the answers would probably be equally
controversial. This year, situations could be observed there that had not
occurred together in a whole century before.
In view of this, many may be interested in thinking more short-term and
acting independently. No doubt it is easier to predict whether it will rain
today than in three weeks' time. In the "short range" you can find two forms
of trading, day trading and swing trading. Both are independent of the
respective market direction. A day trader holds his position for a few minutes
or until the end of the day.
A swing trader works with a larger time window. His expectation horizon
is several days, weeks or months. However, he has to pay for the advantage
of an "overarching view" by being exposed to significantly more future
imponderables. He is a prisoner of his longer time horizon.
This book was written for day traders searching for new ways. However,
it is also suitable for beginners with basic knowledge. Countless promises on
the internet make it difficult for especially beginning, ambitious traders to
find their way through a maze of courses. These often leave the impression
that all you have to do to succeed is to follow a crossover of two lines, a few
chart patterns, indicators and money management rules.
For some time now, market and volume profiles as well as order flow
analysis have been the talk of the town. In my opinion, these belong together
logically and in terms of content. I was all the more surprised that until today
there is no book available in either the German or English-speaking world
that combines these useful forms of analysis and also explains how to use
them effectively in day trading.
Classical Technical Analysis, as taught in hundreds of books has proved
to be unprofitable for retail traders in most cases. Otherwise, the loss rate of
technically oriented traders would not be so extremely high. One first reason
is the fact that Technical Analysis was developed many decades ago under
market conditions that have ceased to exist long ago. Initially developed as a
pseudo-science and successfully used by a few advanced traders, it has
become increasingly popular as a science that makes the dubious claim of
predicting future price movements based on historical series of numbers or
simple geometric shapes and lines.
However, a look at today's globally networked markets shows that many
things have changed fundamentally. Probably the most important change is
the dominance of a few large market participants, who handle about 80% of
the total global trading volume. Their decisions are based only to a small
extent on technical chart criteria. They spend a great deal of time and effort
on fundamental research, which private traders can never compete with.
However, as they have very large resources at their disposal, they cannot
easily build or reduce their positions in a single process. In many cases they
first have to create "space" and prepare their operations undetected.
This leads to movements that do not fit into the picture of technically
oriented traders. Whereas in earlier times we had to deal more with breakouts
from known chart formations or trading ranges, today we see a multitude of
false breakouts. These mostly take place in so-called liquidity zones. These
are areas where either pending orders of small traders are located or are
placed more frequently.
If a false outbreak then occurs, many positions are stopped or closed and
thus fall into the hands of strong market participants who pursue other
objectives. In the eyes of Technical Analysis, this is an upside down world.
Being extremely well known by the trading public makes it easy for market
makers to deceive. If you look at the whole thing a little more realistically,
you may well ask yourself
Why should large market participants who invest hundreds of millions in
fundamental research in the 21st century be guided by the figures of an
Italian mathematician who lived in the 13th century (Fibonacci)? And which
every trader knows.
Futures markets (futures exchanges) are among the oldest markets in the
western world. In Amsterdam already in the 17th century in the form of
option trading, futures exchanges were founded in a regulated form in the
pioneering days of the United States. They gave farmers the opportunity to
sell their future harvests in advance at a fixed price and thus secure their
income. This was then taken over by other sectors as industrialization
developed. Mining companies, which secured income from their future
production. International producers of goods who needed to protect
themselves against exchange rate fluctuations. Airlines that need to protect
themselves against rising paraffin prices, etc. Who bears the risk?
Speculators, who take over the other side of the trade until the contract terms
expire, thus guaranteeing companies a fixed purchase price of products.
In the USA day trading with individual shares seems to be a big topic.
This requires an initial capital of at least 25 - 30k USD. A day trader who
buys or sells a single share must use a substantial part of it to achieve a daily
profit. In the futures a day trader only needs to deposit a margin, which is
fixed per contract. Day trading margins range from $40 for micro contracts to
around $2300 for a contract of crude oil. A day trader can therefore operate
leveraged on the largest regulated futures exchanges in Europe, the USA or
Asia with a lower capital outlay. He is dealing with guaranteed liquidity, gets
fair executions and can limit his risk with stop-loss orders.
This cannot be said of other non-transparent products, which are not
subject to uniform control, especially in Europe, and are offered in an
unmanageable number of substitute products. Nevertheless, there is also a
residual risk when trading in futures. If there are strong distortions, this can
lead to delayed execution (slippage) or trading stops. For this reason, a
market that is in an extreme situation should not be entered at all. In contrast
to trading with shares, a futures or forex trader does not need a stock scanner
and does not have to deal with earnings, analyses, rankings, comments,
balance sheets, key figures, takeover rumors and other company reports. He
has "his" market, which he scrutinizes. However, he has to pay attention to
important news concerning this market: Central bank decisions, economic
data such as NFP, CPI, GDP, oil stocks, key speeches, and geopolitical
events. Upcoming economic data can be found on many financial sites and is
marked with 1-3 symbols according to the expected impact. A day trader has
no opinion of his own. He cares less about the content of news, which is
mostly priced in anyway (old news). His task is rather to analyze and use the
reaction of the market.
Trading Instruments
For a day trader only the absolutely most liquid stock index, interest rate,
commodity and currency markets are considered. Only these can guarantee
good order execution and thus keep losses as low as possible. The huge Forex
interbank market is priced exactly according to the futures exchanges, but it
is a deregulated market without exact volume data.
While futures only trade in standardized contracts, forex trading is
possible with high leverage in any size. A day trader with very small initial
capital can, for example, can trade instruments such as EURUSD or gold, use
the real volume data of the futures exchange for analysis and then act through
a forex broker in any trading size. CFD's of stock indices are also a
reasonable option if you are not a scalper. Futures can also be traded in very
small sizes. Since about 2 years micro contracts of stock indices, Forex
Majors and Gold have been offered here.
The most important trading instruments for day traders are
- Mini contracts S&P 500, Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100, Dax, Hang Seng, Nikkei
225
- EURUSD
- JPYUSD Future (=USDJPY forex pair inverse)
- German Bund
- Crude Oil
- Gold
- 10 y T - Notes
More on the characteristics of individual trading instruments can be found in
Chapter 15
3. The Market Participants
The market profile is also known as TPO and combines time, volume and
price. TPO is an abbreviation for Time Price Opportunity. It has a bell-shaped
structure. The traditional approach extends over one trading day. 30 minute
time periods are shown here in letter form on a vertical plane. Its external
appearance is similar to the volume profile but there is a significant
difference.
The market profile determines the length of time a trading instrument
remains at a certain level. The longer the price stays at a particular level, the
more support and resistance is formed. But these are also zones that are
susceptible to stop-running maneuvers, as liquidity has accumulated there.
Horizontal support and resistance lines can be drawn at different levels but in
conventional chart technique it is always left to the individual assessment of
the observer to determine which zone is of the greatest importance. This
problem does not apply to the market profile, as there is only one fixed
maximum level. In the course of the book, it becomes evident that the
maximum zones determined by the market profile can provide precise
reference points which can then be checked with a view to a trading decision
on the further direction of the market.
Momentum and Follow through are the engines of any significant price
action. In this process he time factor plays a decisive role. Here, the market
profile can provide useful information as well. In the first chapters the
structure of the market was described. Only large market participants can
move the market. The less time the price stays at a level, the greater the
activity of large market participants. Due to the simple visual structure of the
market profile, it is possible to determine at a glance in which zones large
market participants have operated aggressively. Accordingly, you can
consider which group of OTFs has control over the market.
The market profile theoretically distinguishes between different daily
structures. The most important of these will be incorporated in the course of
the book coupled with typical examples. According to theory, the market
profile is used to determine the course of the day after the first hour of
trading. However, this older approach should not be taken too closely,
especially today. But there are a few constellations that allow conclusions to
be drawn. I prefer to plot the market profile using a simple block system. For
the sake of overall understanding, however, I will briefly explain how the
market profile works.
Figure 1: TPO (Market profile) in the course of a day
The letters A and B represent the first two first 30 minute periods of the
institutional trading day. This period is also known as the initial balance. The
start of trading is indicated by a zero and the end by a hash. The duration of
the Initial Balance is not set in stone. Depending on the general market
situation, it may be shorter.
Any extension of the Initial Balance up or down is called Range
Extension. In this case the price left the Initial Balance first upwards (C), then
downwards (D). Then there was a stagnation (E, F, G, H, I, J, K) before the
price moved down and formed a tail (L). This is a single-column row and
indicates the presence of large market participants (other time frame traders).
They bought because they perceived the price as "below value".
To speak of a tail, you should see at least two single-column rows at the
edges of a market profile. In this case you see a "buying tail" with three
single-column rows, which led to an upward movement in the last trading
phase. At the end of the Main Session the price is again "in balance" (#). It is
the widest point of the profile. This is where the price had spent the longest
time.
As followed a few aspects
- The closer the Initial Balance (AB) at the beginning of a day compared to
previous days, the higher the probability of an intraday trend.
- Trend days should never have more than four parallel rows or blocks of
letters during the course of the day. They have a narrow and long (high) day
profile. There are multiple range extensions in the same direction
- Single-column rows show an increased activity of OTFs. If they appear in
the middle part of a market profile, they are called "single prints.
More on the market profile will be found in the course of the book.
5. What is a Volume Profile?
On the time axis in the sub chart, the x-axis shows the conventional time-
based representation of the volume in vertical form. This only contains a
totalized turnover figure (contracts) for a specific time period. However, it is
not known at what price the largest volume was traded.
The price level at which the largest number of transactions took place is
called Point of Control (VPOC). This price is considered to be fair.
Otherwise, most transactions would not take place there. Prices tend to return
to the point of control after testing higher or lower levels. A rising or falling
Point of Control (VPOC), on the other hand, reflects a change in the market
situation. If it changes, a higher or lower price is accepted.
The following chart is intended to clarify why heavily traded volume
zones of the past can help to make the most accurate trading decisions.
Figure 3: EURUSD June 2020 (30 min. chart MEZ, CET)
In the run-up to an ECB meeting (right), the volume profile of the previous
day's institutional trading signaled strong buying activity by major market
participants. These buying zones can be seen on a distinct bell-shaped
volume cluster on the left side of the chart. This is the point of control (POC).
In the right window I have marked the beginning of the new (European)
trading day of EUR/USD. Based on my criteria, it starts at 8.00 CET.
With the publication of the session result EURUSD rose strongly.
Afterwards a pullback took place, which lasted for about 60 minutes. This
pullback exactly reached the strongest buy zone (POC) of the previous day.
This can be seen here by the extended dotted line.
Institutional traders defended their position exactly where they had
extended it the day before. On this chart we are dealing with a 30 minute
chart, which gave a day trader the big picture. An entry would be on a smaller
time level with more filters
It does not necessarily have to be the POC from which the course
bounces. Other pronounced volume zones and their peripheral parts are also
good support or resistance zones.
- The horizontal representation of volume by means of a histogram in the
main chart is called a volume profile.
- The point of control of the volume profile is also called VPOC. This is the
price zone in which the most transactions have taken place.
- Pronounced volume clusters are called high volume areas. These indicate
price zones in which large market participants were active.
- If prices return to these zones, the probability that they will be defended
increases
- The strongest zones are always formed when classic support and resistance
zones and volume profiles match
The following chart situation should further illustrate this
Figure 4: FDAX June 2020 (15 min. chart, CET, CET)
Here the price bounces back at the beginning of the new trading day from a
strong volume cluster formed during the previous day's institutional trading
hours. The chaotic movement in the low volume off-hours time has no
meaning.
Naked POC
The most important point of a past period is the so-called Naked POC. This is
a point of control that was not touched the following day. This point attracts
particular attention. If it is reached again the day after next or afterwards,
very promising trading situations can arise
Figure 5: EURUSD June 2020, (60 min. chart CET, CET)
This is only an hourly chart, but even this one shows exactly the level of
reversal. This would have been difficult to see from resistance lines on a
normal chart as well. All these are not coincidences. A day trader would
switch back to a small time frame when this point is reached and look for a
short trade with a low initial risk. After reversing at this important point,
EURUSD fell about 100 pips over the course of the day.
More terms
Thin Profiles are zones where the price is proceeding particularly fast.
These always occur when OTF buyers or sellers are operating aggressively.
Strong indentations are called low volume nodes. These are often located on
the edge of high volume areas and can be starting points for reversals. In the
case of high volume areas, these are often located on the edge of high volume
areas and can be starting points for reversals. In the market profile chapter,
these zones were named "single prints" . In volume profiles, the term
imbalance has become commonplace.
The memory function of prices to pass through these zones fast can be a
good support for a day trader when planning a trade. If prices have left thin
profiles in an elapsed period of time, they will progress more quickly if this
zone is reached again. Accordingly, it is not advisable to have the high
volume areas of the previous day in front of you. Trades have the best chance
of winning when the path of least resistance lies ahead.
6. Value Area
The Value Area is the centerpiece of the volume profile. It characterizes the
area in which 70% of the total trading activities of a selected period have
taken place. Value Area High and Value Area Low can be represented by
lines or also by a color differentiation within the volume profile as in this
graph. At the beginning of the new trading day the Value Area of the
previous day can help to answer some basic questions.
These are:
- Did the market open above/below yesterday's Value Area today?
- Did it stay there after the opening phase or did it fall back into the value
area of the previous day?
The following example shows a situation where the value area of the
previous day was left at the beginning of the new trading day.
Figure 7: E-Mini S&P July 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
In the opening phase of the Main US Session, E-Mini left the range of the
previous trading day upwards. This was followed by a retest of the previous
day's Value Area High (arrow). At this point it was decided whether the
market was ready to accept higher prices. With the appearance of the candle
marked with the arrow, a daytrader would have considered a long position
after further examination
A trendless day is characterised by the fact that the price does not manage
to leave the value area of the previous day during the important opening
phase. In this case, a daytrader can trade on a smaller intraday time frame
after further analytical steps, even without considering the superior market
direction. Value Area High and Low as well as further extreme points of the
previous day can serve as reference points. A first target point would be to
regain the POC of the previous day.
Older theories say that in such a situation there is an 80% probability that
the value area high or low of the other side will be reached again. However,
like all theories, this should be treated with caution and weighed up on a
case-by-case basis.
7. Forms and Shapes of Profiles
On the left side you can see the market profile, next to it the volume profile
of the same time period. Profiles are similar, but have different points of
control. The dynamics of the price action is shown in the market profile by a
buying tail. The white spots in the lower area mark single print zones. This is
where rapid price advances occurred. You can also see deviating points of
control.
It should not be difficult to imagine the opposite case when a b profile
appears. A b profile is therefore bearish especially at the beginning of a
downtrend, bullish at the beginning of a bottom formation. On a smaller time
scale it can signal a short interruption of a strong uptrend (long liquidation).
From a chart technical point of view, a D profile is a sideways day, in
many cases also an "inside day", whose entire price range lies within the
fluctuation range of the previous day. The market is "in balance". Buyer and
seller have found a balance. Neither side feels the need to move the market
aggressively. This is particularly evident in the now more bell-shaped
formation of the volume or market profile. The market profile shown in
figure 1 represents a D structure.
Double Distribution Profiles occur relatively frequently. Day traders
who specialize in these profiles have good chances of success. This is a two-
part profile. Initially the price spent some time in one zone. Then there is a
sudden rejection in form of an imbalance before a new strongly traded price
zone is formed. If such an event has taken place, then a daytrader should
check the development of the next day, but also the further intraday course.
Once such an event has taken place, a daytrader should take a close look at
the development of the next day or the day after next, sometimes even the
final phase of the same day.
Figure 9: Market Profile Double Distribution Day
There are many mixed forms of profiles that can take on a meaning of their
own depending on the situation. In chapter 4 on the market profile it was said
that trend days have a narrow and high profile. There is no question that trend
days are the most profitable opportunities. In practice, however, a trend rarely
extends evenly throughout the day. It is not uncommon for strong trends to
begin when significant liquidity zones are triggered in the first trading period
and the price then immediately moves in the opposite direction. This will also
be illustrated by many detailed examples in this book.
8. How to display the Profiles?
It is not difficult to see that on day 3, significant price movements began after
important reference points of day 1 and 2 were reached. A day trader would
now try again to find low risk entry points in these zones on a smaller time
frame. The right profile would of course not have been available at that time.
Another signal for a possible trade appeared on day 2 (bottom centre
chart). There the price bounced off a strong high volume area from day 1.
Day 1 was a double distribution day
Note:
Volume Profiles of main trading hours in some cases may differ from 24
hour profiles. At the beginning of a new trading day, it is advisable to
always first look at the volume profiles of the last peak trading hours, as
this is where institutional market participants are particularly active.
Clusters that have formed in the peak trading hours are the most
meaningful.
The Weekly Profile
To take a further look into the past you can use a fixed feature which is
available in my software (Atas). There you can choose to display the profiles
of the past week or the past month. I have plotted an example from July 2020,
which offered a very great opportunity, which was not difficult to spot.
Consequently, it was clear that you had a strong momentum behind you and
that you were not just dealing with a grasshopper. This would have given a
day trader a completely different motivation to stick with this trade till the
end of the trading day
Figure 12: E-Mini S&P July 2020 (15 min. chart, GMT)
It can be very profitable to wait for such situations and then analyze the
market in a systematic order in a few minutes. In the section 19 with
complete examples you will find another trade of this kind.
Tip: Always analyze by expired trading periods or trading days, never
by calendar days
Flexible volume profiles have proven to be irreplaceable for the way I work.
Ultimately, this is about combining the large image with the small one. For
the current day I only use flexible volume profiles with the beginning of the
main trading hours.
The big advantage of flexible volume profiles is that you can use them not
only as an aid for current trading decisions. You can also use them to take a
closer look at individual situations of the past days in isolation. Some basic
knowledge of charts is required here, but I do not mean this in the sense of
individual candlestick patterns or other chart technical formations. These
change anyway in every time frame.
The following chart shows a situation where a 5 day flex profile of
EURUSD provided strong support. The strongest reference zones of a
continuous trading phase always occur when traditional support and
resistance zones complement each other with volume profiles.
Figure 13: EURUSD May 2020 (60 min. chart, CET)
On this chart a downswing was marked with a flexible VP over its entire
length. This downswing extended for a period of five days. Arrow 1 shows
the start of trading in Tokyo about 2 days after the downward movement was
completed. Asian markets in some cases respond well to important reference
points in the volume profile. Arrow 2 shows an upswing immediately after
the release of some kind of economic news. However, this was associated
with increased risk. Arrow 3, on the other hand, indicated an optimal day
trade, as London banks open at 10.00 CET. A more than 100 pip intraday
followed. A more than 100 pip trade in intraday followed. It is sometimes
worth waiting. Even as a day trader you do not have to trade every da
Flexible Volume Profiles in Sideways Markets
Sideways markets are treated like a stepchild in the trading literature. The
term trend is a myth for many traders, as it associates home runs, success and
periods that require little activity. Many traders have the illusion that you can
only make money with trends.
However, there are realistic estimates that say that sideways phases take
up about 70% of the total daily movement. This is particularly evident in the
case of individual shares, where large gaps "all over the place" can present
themselves like a minefield on a daily chart. Not much happens during
current trading.
In the volume profile analysis it is important to focus on sideways zones.
One of the problems of trend traders, according to my observations, is that
they do not realize in time that they are in a consolidation zone. They hope
for too long that a trend will continue. This inevitably develops from an
increased trend based thinking.
The next chart is intended to demonstrate once again how useful it can be
to combine flexible profiles with some important chart technical knowledge.
First and foremost, it is important to localize trading ranges correctly from
the beginning.
To show the perhaps most important function of the market profile, I have
illustrated it next to the volume profile as a block. Both profiles usually do
not show any major external deviations. It is more the different points of
control that can sometimes provide essential information.
These are based on the different view of both profiles. The volume profile
does not necessarily have to be identical with classic support and resistance
lines, because it only shows where the largest sales have taken place.
Significant price movements can also originate from zones that offer little
technical support or resistance. However, the market profile shows the time a
trading instrument remains at different price levels.
Figure 14: E-Mini Nasdaq 100 Future July 2020 (30 min. chart, CET)
In July 2020 a trading range developed here, which extended over 2 days.
The Trading Range was drawn after 2 fixed points became visible at the top
and bottom (black rectangle) On the third day a breakout occurred during the
European trading period.
This breakout brought many European trend traders on board, who hoped
for an immediate continuation of the overall trend and took long positions at
the breakout. However, it was a false breakout, as the price slumped sharply
after the opening of US trading. A volume trader now would be looking for
support, as it was likely that a ricochet could be imminent.
If you now look at the market and volume profile for the entire period
(full 24-hour profiles until the start of the new trading day), you will see
similar profiles that provided good support. However, the POC of the market
profile was considerably lower. I have extended this here. There, all stops all
stops of those traders were triggered who had taken long positions the day
before due to classic support lines. Only after this zone was cleared by
market makers the upward trend resumed. A day trader who had displayed
both profiles here thus had precise information that would have made his
trading decision regarding a long position much easier.
Again, the following chart shows a situation where the market and volume
profiles complemented each other perfectly. Here you can see a downward
period that extended over a period of 5 trading days. However, the course is
very unsteady. You could also have mapped a Trading Range. The entire
period was captured with a flexible profile. This ends immediately before the
opening of the Main Session of day 6.
Figure 15: E-Mini S&P September 2020 (30 min. chart, CET)
During day 5 a bottom finally began to develop. How could you see this? The
S&P first broke out with a bottom squeeze upwards (Arrow) Squeeze
Patterns are explained chapter 22.4. On this day, both the volume profile and
the market profile formed a strong base. However, the point of control of the
market profile is located slightly below the point of control of the volume
profile.
A pullback occurred in Asian and European trading hours. Now we are
waiting for the opening of the US Main Session. After about 45 minutes of
trading, the price fell below the point of control of the market profile.
Afterwards a quick reversal took place. A perfect complete trend day started.
The volume profile of this day is shown on the far right. It is narrow and
high.
A day trader who would have studied the overall situation long before the
US opening could calmly develop a trading plan and implement it stress-free
after opening. The E-Mini rose by 60 points until the end of the trading
session. There was no reason to close out his long position too early. The
small trend profile on the right shows that continuous advances (range
extensions) in the same direction took place throughout the entire trading
day.
I leave it to the reader to think about whether one tries to scalp a highly
volatile overall market day by day hoping to make a small profit or to
concentrate on really promising opportunities without stress. The latter would
not exactly increase the turnover of a broker.
Furthermore, something became clear here which I mentioned in the
chapter 7 about the shapes of profiles. b - Profiles are not always bearish as in
theory, but bullish when they appear at the end of a downward movement.
Reversals are the best opportunities for a day trader. Every trend begins
with micro inflection points.
POC Shifts
In order to demonstrate the great advantage of Flex VP's in concrete terms
with further examples, I will now show a current example in principle "before
- after". The following method I have called POC Shift. This combination of
words is not too complicated and gets to the heart of the matter.
First of all, a few basic remarks, which refer to both the market profile and
the volume profile. The POC reflects the fairest price. A large market
participant (OTF) will always try to buy at a fair price or below. This leads to
an increase in the POC. If he is still willing to make further purchases after
this, he must have a lot of conviction. He takes the risk to buy "above value".
If it is an OTF seller, then in the same case you would say: sell short in the
hole. A repeated buy/sell is therefore an important event, because it underpins
the intention of an OTF.
Finally, the price that is considered fair also changes again. However, all
this must be assessed in context. For example, if the market is in a general
sideways movement on a daily basis and somewhere within the previous
day's price range, then a POC shift should be considered less important. Even
in the case of short covering and long liquidation, there is no great market-
determining conviction on the part of the OTFs, as this is more of a
temporary action.
However, if a POC shift takes place near important reference areas, it
should be given more attention. Another marginal factor is whether the
market has opened "out of balance" or not. An out of balance opening is an
opening of the main session above or below the value area high or low of the
previous day and is a particular challenge for a day trader. In this case he has
to deal with a new market situation. This means higher chances with
increased risk at the same time.
This brings us to the most important factor of every price action. This will
be addressed even more often in this book: Follow Through. If a POC shift
takes place, then day trader and OTF's have the same interests for a day
segment
- OTF's plan to move the market based on their fundamental knowledge
- A day trader can only make a profit following the smart money as quickly
as possible
This is where the tires touch the ground. This is where another important
factor comes into play: time (timing). The purpose of VP and order flow
analysis is not guessing nor following any trends, assumptions or "gut
feelings", but to enter the market as soon as possible after OTF's have done
so.
Figure 17: Fdax June 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
On this graph, you can see a clear downward movement of the Fdax on the
left side. Big players had built up short positions during the institutional
trading hours of the previous day. Hence, I extended the POC of this zone
into the next day. This is done automatically with my software. The next day,
the price bounced off exactly there and thus gave a short signal on the 15 min
chart level. Immediately afterwards, the Fdax fell, but then made a pullback
to the upside. This aroused the suspicion that a trading range could now form,
because the targeted market direction of the big picture was short.
If one had missed this first rebound or had made a profit, one could start
to draw a flexible volume profile in order to follow the situation more
closely. There is not always a second rebound at the same level.
In the last chapter it was mentioned that basic knowledge of trading
ranges is an advantage. By this I also mean developing a feeling for
anticipating trading ranges. One way to do this is to draw a boundary as soon
as you see three parts of an M or W. A little trick is to look out for overlong
candles. These often announce a trading range. In this case this was the long
candle on the left side of the flexible profile.
Now you just wait and see if the right leg of an M is formed. In order to
better understand the situation that now follows, one can simply think away
from the following development on the right outside the window. This Flex
VP will now be further adapted to the current market situation in every
further development. Normally you simply set another empty area for the
flexible volume profile or move it back and forth for a second every now and
then to see changes. What happened shortly afterwards?
Figure 18: FDAX June 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
On the far left you can see the market profile of the overall upward trend. It is
narrow and high. This is typical for trends. Next to it I have shown the
volume profile. In this case, after an accumulation phase in the middle part
of the volume profile, aggressive additional buying was carried out.
Otherwise there would not have been a large imbalance with a very thin
volume profile. The extended line of this high volume area represented a
strong resistance, which pointed to a type 2 bounce back (chapter 9).
Once you have located such points, further steps follow to find an exact
entry point in a small time frame. Here again I only want to show how the
flexible volume profile can be used.
9. Bounce Backs
With regard to the reaction of the price in important zones of volume and
market profile, a few basic situations should be distinguished.
Type 1
First of all, a simple principle comes into play, which is known from the
classical chart technique: support and resistance. However, these zones are
not always clearly defined.
Figure 20: EURUSD April 2020 (30 min. chart, CET)
On this chart you can see structures of support or resistance lines. Around the
volumetric profile, they could be seen as a kind of buffer zone, where the
momentum weakens once reached. Here the market made an upward
movement. , which is marked by the grey profile on the left side.
Afterwards, downturns followed, which were absorbed by the strongest
volume zones of the entire upward movement. Near the extended points of
the high volume areas there are further smaller support zones which are less
precise. The arrows indicate possible entry points in liquid trading hours.
Type 2
Figure 21: Nasdaq June 2020 (1 min. chart, CET)
Here we see a similar situation. In the first phase of the US Main Session
there was a big sell off. This can be seen on the far left. After that, however,
strong buyers (Group A) took action and now looked at the price "below
value", forcing an intraday trend reversal. The subsequent upward movement
was again captured here with a volume profile (grey field). In the middle area
you can see a high volume area. During the upward movement, strong buying
had taken place there, which left a thin profile zone. This was called an
imbalance zone. Here I have filled it with a circle.
Afterwards the upward movement started to slow down. Now another
group (B) of large market participants felt that the price was too high (above
value) and began to sell. Finally the price came back near the lower circle.
The author of market profile classic "Mind over Markets" compares this
situation with a balloon inflated. When it is squeezed, it bounces back
quickly (2).
Group B has now made a partial profit by bringing the price back a good
distance. However, they do not want to risk a fight with group A and
liquidate their position just before reaching the starting point of the
Imbalance Zone. They realize that the resistance will be too strong.
This reaction seems to be the most likely and has been marked here with a
grey bar. For a day trader it would have made sense to look for a long
position in this zone, because he knew that strong buying had started there
and that group A would not simply give up. Sometimes prices even reverse in
the area of the thinnest profile zone. This depends on the strength of the trend
and can be narrowed down using methods that are shown later in the book
Type 3
A fight ensues. Group A gives up. The balloon bursts. This can happen, for
example, if a starting situation has changed rapidly, an unexpected message
hits the market, etc. Now group B will try to defend the newly won territory.
The same game starts in reverse. However, it is relatively uncertain whether
the classic rules of a pullback to the "breakout zone" will always apply. There
are also situations in which former zones are not reached again. Markets do
not function according to the modular principle
10. General Set ups
This chapter briefly explains the setups that occur with each type of price
movement. In principle, they remain the same, but can form different
variants. Afterwards the reader has a sound basis to better understand and
use the Order Flow Tools. Using order flow tools without reference points is
not recommended.
It has been said so far that significant movements always occur when OTF’s
act aggressively. Previously they "accumulate" positions either on the short
or long side. In normal stock trading, a sideways phase with a subsequent
downward movement would be called "distribution". Accumulation occurs in
sideways phases rotating around a POC similar to trading ranges. Here the
market is "in balance".
You should not think that the bounce backs mentioned in chapter 9 only
consist of 2-3 candles. They were shown in the previous charts to understand
the big picture in larger time frames. Accumulation patterns also form in
small time frames. This is even very helpful, because it gives a day trader
enough time to develop his trading plan. This is shown in detail in later
chapters.
An accumulation setup occurs at the beginning of a significant movement,
but often it also appears in the middle of a trend. This can be observed very
often with the E-Mini S&P. An accumulation setup typically shows at least 5
more or less parallel (single) swings. This corresponds to approx. 3 rotations
near the POC and is a good rule of thumb to get an indication that an
accumulation could possibly take place here.
The following chart shows the two most important setups. If an
accumulation has taken place, then a follow up setup is likely.
Figure 22: Bund May 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
This accumulation was a beginning SHS pattern that was not completed. As
soon as you see a rotation with more than 5 swings you can display a flexible
volume profile and wait for order flow signals. This is especially useful if the
higher-level analysis at the beginning of the trading period has identified
important reference zones.
The Follow up set-up is much shorter. Once OTF traders have started to
move the market aggressively, they often only take a short break. This follow
up setup is a bearish Zigzag pattern, which was not completed downwards,
just like the SHS pattern before during the accumulation setup.
In this case, no pullbacks took place, which went back to the patterns. The
time of the setup also plays a role. Both setups took place in the afternoon.
Institutional traders therefore did not have much time left, as institutional
Eurex trading closes at 17.30 with a Eurex closing auction.
It was both setups that aroused the suspicion that an immediate aggression
of smart money would take place, as they were well- known patterns that
caused many traders without context thinking to take short positions. Big
players therefore did not need to stage a false outbreak, but only "serve" the
positions of retail traders who went short.
The Bund Future is a good instrument for beginners who want to gain
experience. Although it gives fewer signals, it is far more predictable than the
capricious and illiquid Dax.
10.2 Reversals
20 minutes after the opening of the US Main Session there was once again
an opening phase with stop running. VP and Order flow Tools can be used to
look for additional confirmations that make a fake breakout more likely. For
a day trader who specializes in this field, this can be a lucrative area, as there
are far more fake breakouts today than in the past. Not only during the
opening phase. But to learn this you should not start with the Dax.
Early morning stops take outs are increasingly seen on EURUSD, as many
Asian amateur traders trade this pair of forex during the European night time.
Weak Highs
Figure 24: EURUSD March 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
Hardware
The trading strategies in this book do not require an armada of screens, order
books and charts. Great importance is put on a clear presentation, which
allows a simple and quick overview. A day trader rarely observes more than
two markets simultaneously, depending on the market situation. For this
reason a laptop should be sufficient. A large screen or a second screen is an
advantage if you use other useful pre-filters such as chart overlays.
Software
Unfortunately, it is not possible to follow the tracks of large market
participants with a free-of-charge broker software. For a professional charting
software with profiles and order flow you have to calculate between 50 and
80 E. per month depending on the agreed usage time. This is kept within
limits when you consider that about 15 years ago a day trader had to spend
ten times or more for a professional software, data feed and fast internet
connections.
After trying out some order flow software in the last few years I finally
stayed with Atas. The name means "Advanced Times and Sales". Basically it
has to be said that there is no perfect chart software for everything. It's hard
enough to find one that covers most of the key aspects of my preferred way
of working
The reasons that speak for Atas are
- Professional chart software with integrated MP, VP and Order Flow
features
- Relatively good user-friendliness
- Intelligent shortcuts
- Good Skype support in different languages
- Favorable price - performance ratio in comparison
Further information can be found at www.atas.net
Other order flow software includes Ninja Trader, Volfix, Sierrachart,
Multicharts, Jigsaw daytradr. Ninja Trader offers all kinds of technical
indicators. However, after I had pretty much the worst Indicator / Return
Ratio in the world in my early years, I basically do without 98% of all
indicators. The Order Flow Suite of Ninja is only available in the Premium
Version. This is only worth the price if you work with standard indicators of
technical analysis.
Volfix does not correspond to my analysis methods. Multicharts
advanced is a good software, but a bit cumbersome. Jigsaw Daytradr is
specialized in order book scalping and not an all in one software. Traders use
it as a plugin for other charting software. Sierrachart allows you to trade the
European and US markets as well as the Asian mini futures. However, it is
not easy to deal with the extensive manual in technical English.
It is said that Volume Profile is available for MT4 Chart Software. I was
never interested in this because I only use original data from the Futures
exchanges and a real day trader cannot do without order flow tools. They are
essential timing instruments. If you want to be successful in day trading, you
should at least be technically on the same level as professional traders.
Data Feed
Now to the data feed. For the VP and Order Flow analysis you need either
Level 2 or Level 1 Top of the Book Data - Feed from the original futures
exchanges in the USA, Europe or Asia. Forex trading is a decentralized
market. Forex brokers do offer volume data. However, day traders need
accurate data from the original futures exchanges. What is the difference to
the normal data feed?
Level 2 data feeds also include the market depth (limit order) and the price
at which each order was executed. Level 1 Top of the book data provides all
recently executed market orders with price and time. They are sufficient for
the examples shown in this book. Top of the Book Data feed is available at
very competitive prices from major US brokers.
A bundle (all US futures markets) with high quality data feed (CQG,
Rhythmic, Continuum) costs only about 4 US dollars per month for the US
markets with my US broker, but for Europe and Asia you still need Level 2
data feed.
Level 2 data feeds are also available from some US brokers. For all
important US Futures Exchanges together there is a bundle. As a beginner,
you will be quickly overrun by expensive data feed providers or order
individually what you can have in a bundle. Data feed for Eurex or Asian
futures exchanges are also available at low prices. Below are a few monthly
prices for data feeds for your orientation without
guarantee
- Level 1 US Bundle All CME Markets 4 USD
(Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq, EURUSD, Yen, Gold, Oil, US Treasuries)
- Level 2 US Bundle All CME Markets 31 USD
- Level 2 Eurex (Bund, Dax) 20 Euro
- Level 2 Osaka Futures Exchange (Mini Nikkei) 29 USD
- Level 2 Hong Kong Futures Exchange (Mini Hang Seng) 15 US
12. Order Flow Analysis
The order book is also known as the DOM. It includes all factors that move
the price. Limit orders represent the liquidity of a market, but cannot move a
market on their own. Price movements can never occur without the
appearance of market orders.
Figure 25: DOM Ladder E-Mini S&P
The limit orders of the sellers are shown here on the right in red, the limit
orders of the buyers on the left in blue (contract numbers for futures,
quantities for individual shares...) In the middle you can see the most recently
executed trades on the Bid (buyer) and Ask (seller) side. The last traded price
is shown in the outer columns.
How do price movements occur?
The price always increases when a market buy order meets the closest
sell limit order(right) and the number of contracts is greater than the
number of contracts offered there. In this case, this is called "lift the
ask".
The price always falls when a market sell order meets the closest buy
limit order (left) and the number of contracts to be sold is greater than
the limit order on the buyer's side (closest). In this case, the term "hit the
bid" is used.
There are Day traders who work exclusively with DOM ladders. However,
this can cause problems, as this is where manipulation takes place. This is
known as "spoofing". These are deceptive maneuvers that take place on the
DOM ladder itself. Large limit orders are placed in the market to generate a
magnetic attraction. This tempts retail traders to stand in front of the market
in the hope that the market will turn up if, for example, a large buy limit order
appears on the left side of the ladder and the market has not yet reached it.
Shortly before reaching this level, however, the limit order suddenly
disappears. This is also where Algos come in. There are voices talking about
the "golden age of the order book", when there were "only real" limit orders.
By this they mean the time before 2010. I cannot judge this. But I can
remember conversations with professional Frankfurt traders in 2006. Even
then, they complained vehemently about fake limit orders.
As a day trader you should decide for you if you want to follow the
constantly up and down flickering numbers of the DOM ladder or if you
prefer to concentrate on some other meaningful things. There are voices
talking about the "golden age of the order book", when there were "only real"
limit orders. By this they mean the time before 2010. I cannot judge this. But
I can remember conversations with professional Frankfurt traders in 2006.
Even then, they complained vehemently about fake limit orders.
Atas software offers features to help decipher the limit order confusion on
the DOM board. There is a system called Smart tape. This tries to break Limit
into certain orders of magnitude to locate iceberg order. This is a fragmented
limit order, which is placed in the market by OTF's to disguise their
intentions. But even if these are localized, you still do not know when a
significant price movement will occur. In addition, other soft wares have
been introduced recently. These show changes in limit orders. However, this
does not change the fact that limit orders can suddenly disappear. My method
to locate iceberg orders and their resolution can be found in chapter 12.3.1
There are also other functions. With the Order Flow Indicator you can
have colored balloons with the numbers of the executed market orders flying
over the screen, project the VWAP or have possible support and resistance
zones displayed automatically. However, these are often located where I
would not draw them.
I only use a few functions of the order flow tools that I consider useful.
These are shown and explained in the following graphics. Apart from that I
state clearly that it is not the number of tools that bring success. It is
impossible to concentrate on everything. Trading will not get better by this.
The only important thing is that you know a few tools that have hand and foot
and that you can master them.
A simple alternative is just integrating the limit order into the chart
window. As a further supplement, you can, for example, activate a "Big
Trade" function or optionally other features that indicate when larger contract
numbers are being traded.
The following chart is from my Trade Archive. Here you can see an
integrated DOM histogram and the order mask.
Figure 26: integrated DOM and order mask
On the right side you can see the order mask and the Buy and Sell Limit
Orders of the DOM board separated by color in form of a histogram in my
chart window. In this case they replaced the DOM board. For this trade I had
additionally switched on the Big Trade function, which is explained in the
next section. This flickered up at the end of the first long downward candle as
a red circle. It confirmed in this case that immediately after my short entry,
large sales came into the market. Now I could immediately put the trade on
break-even, because I had enough downward momentum behind me.
In my opinion, the most important function of the DOM ladder is the
increased speed of the order flow when large market orders are given by OTF
traders who aggressively move the market. In this example my short entry
was given after a rebound on the horizontal line visible above. This
corresponded to the criteria shown several times in this book. Only a few
minutes later, DOM showed a sharp increase of activity. The aggressiveness
of the sellers can also be seen in the sub chart. There the great predominance
of sell market orders is visible as a heavily falling delta. OTF traders had
started to move the market aggressively via market orders.
DOM ladders may be useful for scalpers. However, there are other ways
to determine whether the speed of a market is increasing if you have
problems seeing it on the chart itself.
Features - Big Trades and Speed of Tape
The Atas software contains extra features that are constantly being expanded.
In this section I would like to show the features I like. The Big Trade feature
is a useful help. It shows simultaneously when an increased number of
market orders are coming into the market.
The colors green and red represent buy and sell orders that have been
executed. It does not depend very much on individual colors. Unless they
start in the middle section of a swing or trade. In this case the color should
already indicate the correct "direction of travel" as you may see in the last
graph. There a red circle was flashing up, which coincided with my trade
direction. At the end of a swing, both colors can be seen, because this is
where many market participants come together for a variety of reasons.
Figure 27: EURUSD Big Trades September 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
If these alerts occur more frequently towards the end of a swing, as shown
here at the bottom middle of the chart, then you should either liquidate a
position that is running in profit or look for a potentially promising trend
reversal.
Speed of Tape
The Speed of Tape function can measure order flow speed on the DOM
ladder. This can be a pre-warning when the market is approaching a turning
point. While the Big Trade function will display circles, the Speed of Tape
function will change the color of individual candles as the order flow
accelerates. In the following example I have illustrated a typical situation.
You can also use this function to get first hints for stop running or the
imminent end of swings.
Figure 28: E-Mini S&P September 2020, (1 min. chart, CET)
In this case there was a clear stop running setup of the E-Minis, which was
easy to locate on a 1 minute chart. The white bar showed a considerable
acceleration of the order flow. The volume chart in the sub chart shows a
spike. Once the Speed of Tape function is switched on, there is no need to
look at the DOM and you can immediately look for further order flow
confirmations. These will be presented in the next chapters.
This footprint chart shows a reversal of the E Mini. The Bid side has been
"hit" more often. Footprint Charts can be read diagonally from top right to
bottom left in a falling market. In this case you can see a red number on the
next lower floor. This number is only displayed by the Order Flow software
if the number of sell market orders is at least twice as high as the limit orders
on the buyer's side (hit the bid).
Conversely, for aggressive buyers (lift the ask) a green number is
displayed on the right side. This is then read from the bottom left to the top
right until the next upper level. The amount of overweight can be adjusted
with a multiplier as you like. Here you should experiment a little bit,
depending on the market you choose. The number of market orders should be
about twice the value or more.
Figure 30: Footprint E- Mini S&P July 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
Here you can see a stacked negative market order on the left. A large
imbalance on the next lower level on the bid side (left) is also visible here
without any color difference (red-green). This indicates a strong tendency to
sell. The price comes back a little bit afterwards, but the POC's of the next
candles do not rise above the high of the first Imbalance candle on the left.
Then a second impulse occurs. The POC's fall. Large sellers become visible
(circle). Now you can think of a short entry.
The higher the relative difference within an imbalance, the better
If you ask a normal thinking person why prices are rising, he will answer:
"If more is bought than sold, the price rises and vice versa". On the futures
markets, every long position is followed by a short position. A large market
player who appears as a seller does not necessarily expect the price to fall. He
can also do this to close a long position that he had taken profitably (long
liquidation).
For this reason, one should not overestimate individual large numbers on
the Footprint, unless they appear repeatedly in certain areas. Sometimes, for
example, OTF's start selling even before a top is reached. This was also
shown in the Big Trade feature chart. They are warning signals.
In the case of an ongoing trade, you should always find sufficient "color"
confirmation on the Footprint Chart to encourage you to hold the trade. This
is another advantage of Footprint Charts. It can motivate a day trader to hold
a trade as long as possible. For example, once you have started a short trade,
you want to see as many imbalances or red numbers as you see on the next
chart. It is also important that the POC's of the individual candles move in the
desired direction.
It is not always stacked imbalances that can be important. If you see one
or more green numbers in the top of a mainstream high or up leg that are
wedged in and immediately countered by high red sell orders, then these are
trapped traders. In such a case more haste is required.
Figure 32: E- Mini S&P September 2020 (1 min. chart, CET)
At the top of this Footprint Chart you can see a large sell order (618
contracts). Extremely large orders at the suspected end of a swing are often a
good signal if the speed of trading activity increases at the same time. In all
cases it is important that no new high or low is reached. Of course, here again
the context plays a decisive role. Is it a reference zone or liquidity zone? I
would not trade any reversal without VP, MP or chart technical indications.
Some volume traders have problems to interpret imbalances. This is
understandable if you look for them in the wrong places or consider them in
isolation. Especially before reaching a liquidity zone, imbalances often occur
in the "reverse" direction to push through zones and trigger stop orders. Then,
if a rejection occurs, it is important to be alert.
The construction of a candle of a footprint chart should always be
completed before considering a trading decision. This applies to all chart
constellations regardless of VP and order flow analysis. A typical mistake is
to trade outbreaks or reversals without knowing how a candle closes.
However, there are also borderline cases. These fall more into the realm of an
experienced day trader and will not be explained further here.
Footprint Chart with Volume Profile
Footprint Charts can also be displayed with volume profile. This way, a
visual assessment of the nearer situation can be made quickly.
Figure 33: E- Mini S&P Oktober 2020 (3 min. chart, MEZ)
This situation occurred 20 minutes after the opening of the Main Session. On
the left you can see a profile pattern, which was explained in chapter 7 as a
double distribution. After the upper cluster of the DD pattern had formed,
seller tried to bring the price down. They were stopped at the lower part of
the double distribution pattern. . This way E-Mini was not able to break
through this zone. The right candle, although red, closes higher. Everything
took place in an important zone on the chart. This situation marked the
beginning of an intraday uptrend that lasted until the end of trading.
It is much more informative to watch events like these on the Footprint
and Delta charts than to follow the order book.
12.3 Delta
Delta is in my opinion the most important order flow tool, because it can
provide information on whether accumulation is taking place in conjunction
with deception and much more. There is another reason why I like to work
with Delta. It is always market orders who move the market.
Retail traders work mostly with market orders. OTF traders mostly work
with limit orders to build up their positions undetected. Then they switch to
market orders and move the market. This is not always exactly the same, but
an order flow day trader can often focus on this transition phase, because that
is where the sweet spot is. If he waits too long, he will miss the movement or
an important part. If he enters the market too early, the risk of being on the
wrong side increases. The action cycle of a day trader should always be like
this:
Delta represents the difference between contracts bought and sold during a
selected time period and can be displayed in an order flow software in
various ways
- In the main chart in the form of numbers, which lie inside the individual
candles like footprint charts.
- In the sub chart in the form of a histogram or in cumulative form
- As positive or negative number in a lower horizontal bar
Many traders see Delta primarily as a confirmation of their trading
decisions. Accordingly, it is expected that price and delta will move in the
same direction. This is only true to a certain extent, as it applies to normal
price movements. However, it is precisely these turning points that become
interesting for a day trader, because this is where deception often takes place.
From this point of view, it is especially the deviations that should be
considered. On the following chart the Delta Histogram shows strong positive
deltas. The price should rise, but it falls. Such situations do not occur
continuously, but often at the beginning of decisive movements.
A day trader who looks at possible turning points in reference zones on
delta constellations is much better off than analyzing limit orders on the
DOM ladder. The actually executed order (market order) and the actual
reaction of the market are the best indicators for a future movement.
Figure 34: E-Mini S&P September 2020 and Delta Bars (3 min. chart)
Here you can see that the delta is making new highs in the sub chart.
However, the market is not able to create a new high despite high buying
activity by retail traders. It is held by strong participants.
12.3.1 Absorption
Absorption is the most common form of market manipulation. It often takes
place in connection with iceberg orders. Iceberg orders are split OTF orders.
As the name suggests, they are the tip of an iceberg. For example, if an OTF
wants to buy 2000 contracts, then it is not possible to make this publicly
visible in the order book. In this case it would immediately attract the
attention of other market participants. These would
- recognize the intentions of the big players and take the same market
direction
- prices would immediately show a great imbalance resulting in extremely
poor course executions
Accordingly, Iceberg Orders are dormant in the market as limit orders in
smaller quantities. These are often placed in zones that are preferred by
market participants. If the limit orders are hit, they are automatically
converted into market orders. As a result are no price changes will occur. All
market orders of the opposing side are "absorbed" by iceberg orders.
This can take place in any time frame. Absorption often is easier to
localize with a summed (cumulated) delta curve. The following graph should
clarify this.
Figure 35: E-Mini Nasdaq July 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
Here, retail traders sold strongly in the expectation that the downward trend
that has now begun would continue. They started selling when a new low was
reached. This can be seen on the declining line in the Delta sub chart. Delta
reaches a record low. The number of contracts sold is far higher than the
number of contracts bought. But what happened to the Nasdaq future on the
main chart at the same time? It clearly bucked this trend and even rose
slightly. This was only possible through OTF buy limit orders. Retail traders
without order flow software could not see that all their sell orders were
running against a wall of buy limit orders. OTF's had managed to keep the
market up the market up unnoticed. The market orders were absorbed as the
OTF buy limit orders crept into market orders. Shortly after a stacked
imbalance appeared on the Footprint and the upward movement began.
In my opinion this is the safest method. To make a trading decision I
prefer Delta Tools in conjunction with the Footprint Chart clearly to the order
book. To demonstrate that my VP and Order Flow setups work in all liquid
markets, I would like to show another trade from my archive, which Asian
readers of this book should take a good look at. Order flow analysis is
unknown in China. This opens up great opportunities for advanced retail
traders.
Figure 36: Mini Hang Seng March 2019 (3 min. chart, local Hong Kong
time)
As you can see from this example, there is no need to spend the whole day in
front of the computer. Furthermore, it is not always the most complicated
methods that bring the greatest success.
Tip: Concentrate on a few order flow methods, but master them.
12.3.2 Variants
There are also divergences that take a different form. In the next example you
can see a falling delta while the price is still rising. Delta takes on a kind of
leading function here. The difference to the last chart is that OTF´s intervene
in the market earlier and operate with sell market orders while the price is
still rising. This is especially the case with fast reversals. But there are also
mixed forms. This will perhaps become clearer in the following chart
Figure 38: E-Mini S&P September 2020 (1 min. chart, CET)
This is the E-Mini at the beginning of a pitch black day in September. The
overall trend was short. The market had formed a trading range after about 20
minutes. A flexible Intraday VP could be plotted. 15 minutes after the
opening, however, Delta had already formed a new high, which was not
confirmed by the index. This can be seen in the middle of the Flex VP
window. Iceberg orders were placed here, which absorbed all Buy Market
orders. It was a first warning signal.
Now OTF sellers sold clearly into the still slightly rising market. This can
be seen from the Delta divergence. The penultimate candle in the profile
showed a stacked imbalance of sellers, the first candle outside the profile as
well. Then a POC shift down took place. But before that the POC of this
flexible volume profile had provided a very good reference zone for a
ricochet, as shown in the form of the extended POC line (arrow). All in all a
bundle of short signals
If you pay close attention to this delta divergence you will notice that
there was one more final deception. Before the strong downward movement
started Delta rose a little bit. But the price fell. That again was absorption.
There are also mixed forms that are particularly interesting. Exactly here was
the sweet spot for the whole following movement. The price hurried Delta
downwards. For a better understanding, I will show this situation again in
close-up.
Figure 39: E-mini at the time of the beginning of the trend
It is often the price that anticipates the start of decisive movements, not Delta
as many traders assume. If such rather complex delta situations occur in the
opening phase of a market, special attention should be paid. Let us briefly
summarize this example again.
- Approx. 20 min. after the opening, Delta made a new high, but the price
not. This means a clear absorption. The Opening high got rejected!
- After that, Delta fell, but the price rose slightly (direct divergence)
- 30 min. after opening new absorption...a raid started
What has become of this situation can be seen on the following chart. This is
reminiscent of the dynamics of the Hong Kong Chart. A similar constellation
existed there at the start of trading. On the following chart the discussed
opening range is hardly visible.
Figure 40: E-Mini S&P 90 min. later (1 min. chart)
For this trade too, there was no need to look at the order book. Besides, I
doubt very much whether anything at all would have been seen there in the
midst of raging numbers during the opening phase.
There are many variations of absorption. They are part of everyday market
life. Delta can help to find them. In my online course I will present other
important Delta setups. One way to work effectively is to focus on price
action and cum delta curve when important zones are reached or the structure
of a trading range is established. This requires a little practice. You should
also remember what I said about accumulation setups in chapter 10.1. They
are usually created in 3 swings surrounding the POC. Observation is
important here.
In the last example, first of all the superior situation and a flexible
Intraday VP gave a good idea for a possible short trade. Then a delta
divergence appeared. The next step was to unfold the chart and look for OTF
sellers on the footprint chart. This gives the final confirmation in a three step
analysis chain that a day trader can easily handle in a few minutes. Speed of
Tape and Big Trades can always be left switched on as an early warning
system. But they are actually not absolutely necessary.
This example showed once again that one minute time frames on charts in
many of today's situations are not only useful for scalping.
- Pay attention to whether a market forms a range in the first half hour
- Note delta divergences, where the price is leading
- Intraday movements are no coincidence. Every trend begins with
turning points at micro level.
Unfortunately there are also market phases in which cum delta takes a
completely inverse course to the trading instrument. This is especially the
case for currencies at times. I don't know exactly why this is the case.
Perhaps it is because large market participants are increasingly operating a
cyclically or because the trading crowd is sometimes really completely
wrong, as studies have shown. Nevertheless, delta divergences or hybrids can
provide very helpful information BEFORE anything happens.
In chapter 11 I mentioned that there is no perfect software that meets my
analytical requirements. Unfortunately with Atas you cannot always adjust
the cum delta curve as precisely as with Sierra Chart. Probably they do not
fully recognize the great benefit of the view shown here. But I hope they will
be able to improve the software. It is not all about constantly developing new
features. Effective trading methods are characterized by the fact that they are
visually relatively easy to implement.
Figure 41: EURUSD August 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
This is another of my favorite setups. In this example you first saw an
absorption and delta divergence. Retail traders sold, but the price did not
confirm this. Then the price took control again in the main chart. In both
cases, it led the way. Reality prevailed over the expectations of many market
participants. Note the long momentum candle that appeared afterwards. This
formed exactly when the stop-loss orders of all traders who had taken a short
position were triggered.
This is known as a short squeeze. A day trader who has previously taken a
Long position in this case will get a perfect confirmation of the correctness of
his trading decision at this point.
12.3.3 Delta Numbers and Profiles
Figure 42: Delta chart E-Mini S&P June 2020 (5 min. chart)
In the lower bar of this chart you can see the summed delta difference of a
candle in the form of a colored positive or negative number. In the main chart
you can see again the black windows with POC's of the single candles. They
are very important, because rising or falling POC's are the basic requirement
of every trade. The candle with the name "Same" shows strong negative
characters for the second time. Here a change has taken place. Afterwards a
risk-free entry was only possible on the following three candles.
Delta Profiles
Delta can also be displayed using a volume profile chart. On the following
chart the triggering of a daily high takes place. High positive deltas indicate
that many traders have been trapped here.
Figure 43: E-Mini S&P, November 2020 (1 min. chart)
At the top you can see an extremely high number of executed buy market
orders. But the price immediately closes significantly lower. This is a
rejection in combination with absorption. All breakout traders were trapped
here. Order Flow combined with an important chart technical situation gave
decisive indications. The situation occurred 70 minutes before the end of
trading. E-Mini fell by 12 points.
Some traders only use volume profiles to get information about important
potential entry zones. I have also handled this in the same way after I started
working with this form of analysis a few years ago. However, if you really
want to follow the tracks of smart money, a combined order flow analysis is
essential. For Asian traders, I enclose here an example from my archive
showing an open reverse trade of the Mini Nikkei Future, which could be
seen immediately with Delta.
Figure 44: Mini Nikkei Future Osaka January 2019 (5 min. chart, CET)
Many retail traders bought here immediately after the opening. This can be
seen on the positive delta in the sub chart. However, the price did exactly the
opposite. Only early morning stops were triggered. This was followed by a
profitable downward movement.
13. The Preparation
Preparing for a trading day is very important, although it does not take too
much time. It should begin with a brief overview of the last trading day.
Investing.com is a good example of this. This website can be set up in
different languages and time zones. If you click on News (most popular) and
"Top 5 Things to know in the Market", you will get all the important news
that are moving the markets. As a day trader should not have a ready-made
opinion, he is not primarily interested in that. But by a few headlines he
sometimes gets important hints on which markets the interest of the financial
world is currently directed to. The content of the news is rather obstructive
for day trading, because it is proven that when something appears as a
headline, the actual event has been priced in for a long time. Often a headline
signals the end of a trend.
Volatility Check
Secondly, the price board showing the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) is
displayed. This index indicates the short-term fluctuation intensity (implied
volatility) expected by the market using option prices on the S&P 500 in
percentage points. A high value indicates an unsettled market, low values
indicate a development without strong price fluctuations. The VIX is
therefore also known as the "Fear Index" and forms an inverse correlation to
the S&P 500. This is also useful for day trading. At investing.com you can
also project the Intraday VIX Chart by clicking on it. This can be important if
turbulence occurs during the trading day and volatility gets out of control.
Figure 45: Vix Index 2020
After the opening of the Institutional trading, you wait half 15 min. until all
resting orders are executed. Then you can make a first analysis. You ask
yourself the following questions
- Did the market open above or below yesterday's upper/lower value area?
- If so, did he stay there?
- What was the fluctuation range of the first 15 minutes compared to the
previous days?
- Were there any imbalances (buying or selling tails) after the opening?
If you have done good groundwork and developed a trading plan, then in a
positive case you can consider a trade after half an hour. Several examples
presented so far show this.
Unscheduled News
Tracking news sources during trading is a great danger for day traders. It is
distracting and tempts you to be influenced unconsciously. If you have
worked out a trading plan, then you should implement it if it becomes
current. Many traders fail because of this. Nevertheless, there are situations
which should be paid attention to. If a market suddenly becomes volatile
beyond the expected news, you should turn on a streaming news channel and
see if anything unexpected has happened. This is especially true if you are in
a trade.
14. Liquidity and Volatility - An Important Pair
The characteristics of a chaotic market phase can easily be seen in the chart
and also in the structure of the candles. Long wicks (spider legs), many dojis.
In this case it was a mixture of high volatility and extremely weak liquidity.
There is no follow through. After a short time it became clear that the market
was in a trading range. Trading Ranges are always characterized by declining
volume. But it is not a trading range comparable to the examples shown so
far.
If this chart had been mapped to a smaller time frame, you would have
seen a non - directional chart structure with edgy (boxy) shapes and a lot of
overlapping during almost the entire main trading period. Of course, every
trading range dissolves at some point and forms a chart structure with better
filled candles. This was not foreseeable in this market phase.
For this reason it is important to locate a Trading Range as soon as
possible. In this situation a day trader has no choice but to stand on the
sidelines and give preference to observing other trading instruments.
"When in doubt, stay out."
The structure of the volume profile can also show whether it is advisable
to trade. The following volume profiles are taken from the months April 2019
and April 2020. I presented them once for comparison because they show
completely different basic market situations that are hardly recognizable
based on the chart course alone. They show the E-Mini S&P in a 5 minute
time frame.
Figure 50: Volume Profile E-Mini S&P April 2019 and April 2019 (5
min. chart, CET)
On this graphs you can study two extremes. While volatility was at record
lows for many years (left), from mid-March 2020 it took on a dimension
never seen before. The profile on the left lingers longer at each price level
and forms significantly wider bars on the histogram. A year later, it seems to
be unstoppable in its activity. The countless spikes reflect nervousness and
lack of liquidity.
The difference becomes particularly clear when comparing the strength of
both POC's. Although the chart shows a certain structure on a 5 minute time
level in retrospect, all price action was characterized by extreme fluctuations.
Normal trading got out of control and was stopped several times. The drying
up of liquidity drove volatility like a bush fire and brought it to ever new
heights.
15. Characteristics of Individual Trading
Instruments
One may wonder why the list of trade instruments (chapter 3) does not
include the British pound, the Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar. In
my opinion, these markets are not as suitable for intraday trading as the two
major pairs EURUSD and JPYUSD. But there are also traders who trade
Cable (GBPUSD), Loonie (CADUSD) and Aussie (AUDUSD) on a day
trading basis.
Large markets like EURUSD or E-Mini S&P are not easy to move.
Substantial intraday movements are only possible if large institutional market
participants become really active. The more volume, the more information
can be expected from VP and Order flow.
Each instrument has its typical behavior. The Dax moves fast, but
capriciously. This is because this index has very low liquidity compared to
US futures. In the afternoon it has no life of its own and is more or less
dominated by the course of the US markets. Sometimes conclusions can be
drawn from this, especially in case of changes of direction. If you are trading
the Dax, you should read through the chapter Fake Moves carefully, because
here deception and stuffing is taking place without end. But this also offers
chances, if you are prepared for it
The Bund Future moves less restlessly, but offers fewer set ups. Mini
Hang Seng is the favorite in the Far East. For Asian readers another example
of a China trade can be found in the bonus chapter.
JPYUSD sometimes moves more dynamically than EUR/USD and can
deliver fast rallies but can also be slippery. This is partly because it is the
most liquid pair after EUR/USD. On the other hand, this pair reflects a very
wide range of macroeconomic influences. It can even be used as a filter for
the stock market. Another advantage is that trading in the Yen Future has
three peak periods. On reversals we have been seeing a second higher peak,
or a second lower bottom for years.
Figure 51: Typical reversal USDJPY Forex
EURUSD offers opportunities in the morning as shown and is more difficult
to trade in the afternoon as forex options are settled daily (New York Cut).
Unlike in the past, EURUSD can also provide trends during Asian trading
hours, based on previous day's volume profile zones.
Gold rarely gives clear signals at small time levels because the footprint
chart is less informative. However, this seems to be slowly improving. Gold
occasionally gives very good bottom squeeze signals as shown. In chapter 19
you can find another current example and more information. Traders studying
gold should know that the December contract of the gold futures has been the
most important and liquid for years from the second half of the year. This is
due to seasonal reasons.
Besides the profile and order flow analysis, there are also basic
fundamental constellations which, when made visible on the chart, can serve
as a pre-filter for individual trading instruments. For example, there are clear
interrelationships between the euro and dollar index, Dax and Nasdaq, S&P
and yen futures, gold and T- Bonds, Hang Seng and China 50 Future, oil and
dollar etc.
If each of these interrelationships shows strong deviations over a 60-
minute time frame, then the probability of larger price moves or turning
points increases. This way, it is possible to obtain rough clues to keep a
particular instrument under special scrutiny. It is always advantageous to
have some basic fundamental relations behind you. All this is explained in
my online course and would go too far here.
A few years ago, I spent some time observing the positions of the large
institutional traders (commercials). These are announced once a week with a
three-day delay (COT = Commitment of Traders Report). I found that they
are very rarely helpful for day trading strategies. My professional Swiss
colleagues use COT reports on a long-term basis for hedging purposes.
Crude oil is a very dynamic market that can move 10 - 20 ticks or more in
a few seconds (1 tick = $10, example 37.50, 37.51, 37.52...) The dynamics of
the crude oil market results from the fact that there are fewer institutional
traders. Banks only play a limited role here with long only certificates. Many
oil companies have their own trading departments that hedge physical stocks.
Beside you find large private speculators.
If hedges are then liquidated, this can lead to rapid upward movements. In
general, you can say that crude oil has more to do with "real" classic chart
patterns than other futures markets. The next difference with crude oil is that
the futures contract expires each month around the 20th. At least 4 days
before this date, oil should no longer be traded, because then the volume of
the expiring contract will decrease rapidly.
In the case of oil, only the full contract is generally suitable for day
trading. The Crude Oil Mini contract, unlike other popular minis, has very
little liquidity. You shouldn't be fooled into trading something like this just
because it requires half the margin. Beginners may not be told this. Until last
year this was similar with the micro contracts of gold, S&P, Dow, Yen etc.
For a day trader with limited resources it is advisable to trade oil only if
the chart shows well filled candles even on a 1 minute time frame, whose
average intraday length at the beginning of a trade does not exceed 10 ticks.
A few examples can be found in the final chapter 19. After appropriate
training, Crude Oil is at times a good market for day traders. This small
overview is intended to help beginners to avoid a few basic mistakes.
Every little mistake due to ignorance costs money and is
avoidable
16. More on Market Profile
This book has already explained what single print zones and imbalances are.
These are called buying and selling tails in the market profile analysis. In the
following I will give another example of a combined presentation of volume
and market profile. You can also replace the representation of the letters of
the market profile with a block system.
A Market Profile Interpretation
Figure 52: Light Sweet Crude August 2020 (30 min. chart, CET)
Here you can see a buying tail on the left. OTF buyers entered the market on
day 1, because the sharp drop in price appeared "below value" to them. Their
intentions became even clearer when you consider the length of the buying
tail by which they brought the market under control. On the following days
they showed no intention to leave the market. How do you see this? Day 2
was a balanced D profile day, which is neutral.
Day 3 started again with OTF buying activity in shape of a buying tail. At
the upper end of the market profile there was no more selling tail. It is an
unfinished auction (chapter 10.2) This indicates that OTF sellers no longer
had the conviction to really move the price down. The subsequent downward
movement on day 3 only occurred during the low volume off-exchange
hours. You might remember that I said, that you primarily should observe
what happened in the last main session, when analyzing a market at the
beginning of a new main session. This is something you should be aware of,
especially with oil. This indicated that OTF sellers were still in control of the
overall situation.
The extended POC of the volume profile of day 1 (left) signalled a
possible entry zone for a long position in crude oil on day 4 (right) at the start
of trading. It is worth noting that the extended POC of the market profile
provided an additional signal that was more accurate than that of the volume
profile. Oil stop-running is almost normal before major price moves. The
correct entry point was just below the extended VPOC of day 1 and was not
marked here with a horizontal line.
With regard to the assessment of the market context, a review of the last 3
days seems most important to me. I believe that the significance of zones
decreases the longer they are in the past, epecially today. Your working
screen should not look like a zebra crossing.
I hope that this example can show that the market profile can help to give
a realistic insight into whether OTF buyers or sellers are in control of the
whole process. A daytrader who would have included the approach shown
here in his considerations would not have been surprised at all when the
strong upward movement began at the beginning of day 4. He would have
been prepared for this situation.
When concrete indications of reference points from day 1 came, he would
have tried with conviction to find a low risk entry point on a small time
frame. And it is not only that. It would have given him the mental strength to
hold this trade as long as possible and not just scalp a few pips (Are you with
me?).
Opening Phases
Interpreting opening phases is a special topic. Here the experience and
knowledge of an instrument plays a role. In some cases they require quick
decisions. The market profile distinguishes between different opening phases
Open Drive
The market opens above yesterday's range and immediately continues in the
same direction. The whole day is marked by continuous range extensions in
one direction. A trend day.
Open Drive with Re -Test
The same situation, but the market falls back briefly to an important reference
point. This can be the high/low or the value area high/low, the upper/lower
limit of the previous day's range or yesterday's high or low. As the name
suggests, in this case the initiators of the open drive test whether important
zones are holding.
Open Rejection Reverse
The market opens outside yesterday's range, is rejected and immediately
shoots in the opposite direction as shown several times in this book. Such a
situation offers day traders the best opportunities. But he should know what
he is doing, because this requires a quick mind.
Acceptance
The market opens outside yesterday's value area, but remains within
yesterday's range at higher or lower levels. A new price level is accepted, but
there is no big movement (Inside or D-Day). In this case you can try to trade
in both directions.
Rejection of Value area
The market opens within yesterday's value area, but soon leaves it in one
direction. Then it leaves the old daily range. If this takes place about 30
minutes after opening, then one can assume that the market situation has
changed and should move in the same direction.
All this contains a lot of theory, but sometimes it can give you ideas if you
try to put these situations into the overall context. Of course, a realistic way
of thinking also helps here. For example, if the market is in an excessive
phase after several days of upward movement, an open drive is less serious
than after a consolidation phase.
Open rejection reverses open up better opportunities if, for example, the
overall context is bearish and the market appears temporarily strong during
the opening phase. If you are in an established downtrend on a daily basis,
then you should look for more profitable set-ups. However, these are not the
best method for traders who are only fixed on one trend. Today, trend
changes can happen faster than you think. This is shown in chapter 19.5 for
crude oil. There was a good opportunity to trade with the trend during one
day, but an even better opportunity with the reversal.
Further Aspects of the Market Profile
- Market profiles are very suitable for creating a flexible profile of several
days, if the situation on the chart gives a first indication. If, for example, you
display a market profile of the last 3 days and the next day you get an
intraday entry signal somewhere in the middle, the OTF is often missing. The
probability is high that the price will not develop a trend. The same applies to
the volume profile
- If you plan a long position and see selling tails in at least two individual
market profiles of the last few days, then the starting position is not optimal,
because you know there have been OTFs active in the market that are
oriented in the opposite direction.
- The longer a tail, the stronger the presence of a higher time frame trader
(chart 74) However, you get similarly important information even if you do
not see any tails.In a generally rising trend market, this means that OTF`s are
less interested in turning the market around . This again falls into the area of
market logic.
- In case of an imminent breakout, VPOC and MPOC should be identical. If
they are not, then the probability increases that the POC of the market profile
will be targeted again by market makers to call stops.
Figure 53: Light sweet crude June 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
A flexible market and volume profile was displayed on this chart after it
became apparent that it was a trading range (D profile). This profile ends with
the start of the Main US Session. You can see both the zone with the highest
turnover (VPOC) and the zone with the longest dwell time (M POC). Both
POC's differ from each other.
At the beginning of the Main US Session of the new day, the price
initially moved towards the zone where the prices had stayed the longest
(MPOC). There had been many small transactions, especially during the
Asian and European trading period. Before a large upward trend began, as
many traders as possible were brought in to cover their long positions too
early. On the right side of the chart you can see that during Asian trading
hours important reference zones are often accepted. In this case it was the
Value Area High of the flexible volume profile that provided a second
rebound as the market had shown a bullish tendency towards the end of the
US trading.
The Market Profile on a Small Time Frame
A day trader will not find a favorable starting situation if a large part of a
movement has already taken place. So it makes sense to use the market
profile on a smaller time frame to get information about a changing market
situation. As with the flexible volume profile, the focus is always on
determining as quickly as possible whether the situation changes in favor of
an OTF buyer or seller. This can also involve market profiles of individual
intraday segments. The assessment of the initial phase plays a special role
here.
To illustrate this, I am adding two more examples to this chapter on
market profile. The next example is again about identifying and assessing a
trading range as quickly as possible. Especially important for a day trader is
the opening phase. This should not be judged according to the older views of
market profile theory and initial balance. Everything happens much faster
today.
The following chart shows a trade that did not require a lot of preliminary
work, but arose from an intraday situation. The following chart shows a trade
that did not require a lot of preparation, but arose from the intraday situation.
Figure 54: Light Sweet Crude Oil October 2020 (1 min chart, CET)
On this slide we see the beginning of the Main Session. Again, I mean "the
busiest time" for crude oil, which results from the traditional pit trading
hours. This can also be seen from the volume spikes at 15.00 CET. After a
long opening candle a trading range is evolved. This could be drawn in after
about 20 minutes.
At the same time you can see an accumulation pattern as it has been
described more often now. On the market profile a D profile was formed.
After 32 minutes you could see a false breakout downwards. This reached
exactly to the buying tail of the TPO on the left side. This contains 4 single
column rows. Ok, there was a pin bar to see which led to this. But the view of
the market profile is more compelling especially for less practiced eyes. Now
you can search for stacked imbalances and find them exactly where I marked
it.
In addition to key technical chart zones and reference zones, the end points of
a market profile can also provide helpful information. Such a case is shown
in the following example
Figure 55: E-Mini S&P September 2020 (3 min. chart. CET)
Once again a long candle announced a trading range. This was drawn exactly
after 4 visible swings. During the US lunchtime a short-lived breakout from
an inverse SHS pattern in the left half of the trading range occurred.
Afterwards the trading range was left upwards. It was a false breakout. Then
the price was brought back down.
At the upper end of the market profile you do not see a selling tail. This
was an indication that this downward movement was supported by little OTF
conviction. Furthermore, after the breakout you see a weak high of an
unfinished auction , which I marked with the arrow (chapter 10.2).
When the price fell below the lower limit of the trading range, the buying
tail, which was formed in the first third of the trading range, offered visible
support. Now all you had to do was look for a low risk entry on a 1 minute
chart. Exactly there you will find the stacked imbalance, which signals the
beginning of an intraday trend. There were several arguments to look for a
stacked imbalance, which resulted from the context. Only the spot marked
here offered enough reasons to look for an imbalance as a starting point of a
potential trade. The market profile helped to locate the beginning of an
excellent intraday trend.
17. Filtering the Ledge
Strong trends require the special attention of a day trader. In this chapter I
would like to briefly present a volume profile set-up that I have developed for
current market phases. It can be used from time to time in case of very strong
intraday trends. This Flex VP Setup has been developed out of one of my
older chart technical working methods which I learned a long time ago. The
prerequisite for this technique is, however, that you have previously localized
the beginning of a significant movement on a higher time frame using the
tools explained in the previous chapters. I don't like to use the word trend,
because in day trading it can change faster than you think. First of all, here
are a few brief explanations.
Ross Hooks are called the temporary end points of a trend section. They
were named after my mentor and always arise when profit-taking occurs
within a strong trend (short covering in downtrends or long liquidation in
uptrends). If the trend is then resumed, a Ross Hook must inevitably be taken
out. This was called "Take out of the Hook" in my apprenticeship. None of
this should be difficult to understand, because it is based on normal price
action of an intact trend.
Ledges are parallel mini-congestion zones that form in strong trend
sections when the trend comes to a break. In my experience a Ledge should
not have more than 8 candles (usually 4-6). If you have a little practice, you
can quickly draw them in by connecting two absolute highs or lows or even
candle bodies with each other. One tick is not important. A single candle can
also have a completely different length within a ledge.
With Ledges you should distinguish 2 types. With direct ledges, there is
no real hook because it does not interrupt the trend much. Hanging ledges are
the better ones, because they can only be created after a hook has become
clearly visible. They have more price potential if the trend is resumed. The
following intraday chart shows some direct ledges on the Fdax in a strong
intraday trend.
Figure 56: Direct Ledges Fdax
You can trade breakouts from a direct ledge, but that is not what I prefer. The
next chart shows two ledges hanging back in a strong trend on a 1 minute
chart on a volatile day of the Nasdaq 100 Future. I filtered these with flexible
volume profiles. In this case, the beginning of the trend could be localized on
a 15 minute chart beforehand.
Only a year ago, a 1 minute time frame would not have been considered
here. But the volatility in the year 2020 makes it possible for day traders to
trade in this time frame with regard to an intraday trend or significant price
segment. In general, however, it should be known that downtrends are much
faster than uptrends. You can choose a one-minute time frame as long as the
chart does not form any angular, boxy shapes or many spider legs. This was
not the case on the following Nasdaq chart.
Figure 57: Hanging Ledge Mini Nasdaq Future September 2020, (1 min.
chart, CET)
P profiles are normally bullish. However, in chapter 7 it was said that P
profiles are also found at the end of temporary upward movements. This is
the case here, if you look only at the small zones with the flexible volume
profiles. These were drawn in after a hanging ledge was "in the making".
Finally, a strong trend had begun and it was suggested that this might be a
short counter-trend movement, which would have to be reversed in a strong
trend. But who knows that in advance? At least the resulting P profile
suggested that the short covering process could soon be over. With breakout
of the Ledge to the downside, the POC of the Flex VP is undercut. Exactly at
this point it is a good idea to enter a trade in trend direction, unless you were
already positioned at the beginning of the trend. There is not "the" one
method, but always a more aggressive or defensive behavior of a trader.
If in a strong intraday trend you see a Ross Hook followed by a trailing
Ledge plus P profile (b profile in an uptrend), then there is a high probability
that the trend has resumed before the Hook is taken out. A starting point is
always a drop below the Flex VP POC.
In the past, I used to try to deal with these situations from time to time as
well. But you always had to act more or less blindly. In the end, you can
never be sure whether a trend will really continue if you just have a normal
chart available. The trend is your friend till it ends. However, if a P profile is
formed together with the breakout from a trailing ledge in the trend direction,
the situation is different. In such a case, OTF's (other time frame traders) step
on the gas again after taking a short break.
All this can be additionally secured with order flow signals, but it is not
necessary with P and b ledges on a 1 minute chart. In this case you had six
indications for a low risk entry.
- Established trend
- Hook
- Hanging ledge
- P Profile
- Passing below the POC
- Order Flow confirm if required
Ledge No. 1 on the left side of this chart scored 120 points or more, Ledge
No. 2 more than 70 points. After entry, there was no reason to end the trade
earlier.
Now you could say that you could have seen this with an optimized
moving average, a Keltner channel, an indicator, Bollinger bands or "just like
that" and so on. The problem with all these indicators, however, is that they
only prove to be correct in retrospect. If you are honest with yourself, you
have experienced many situations where a hoped-for trend came to a halt
exactly after you entered it. For this reason there will never be trading
systems that work, because they only work with past values. In this case,
however, you will receive hints from the present. A P-profile indicated
short covering, a drop below the Flex POC plus order flow signaled a clear
action of the OTF's in the here and now. This is the exact difference between
this form of analysis and indicators. Indicators always lag behind.
The maximum risk on both trades was 15 Nasdaq points. This setup has to
go into profit immediately as soon as the POC with closing price is breached
and the breakout of the ledge occurs. The stop is immediately moved to break
even if a follow through takes place, because the entire trading plan was
based on a strong trend. If there had not been an immediate follow through,
this plan would have become obsolete in a few seconds. Now one can ask if
this has anything to do with scalping. In my opinion no, because everything
was based on the imminent expectation of a new trend section. Scalpers do
not go for 100 points on the Nasdaq. It was just a 1 minute time frame, which
was optimal under the given volatility conditions. Even in this time frame
clear and well filled candles were formed, but a situation that was easy to
interpret. In chapter 19.7 you find some more examples.
These special setups do not appear often. But they can
sometimes present real gifts to a day trader who knows how to
handle them.
18. Broadening Tops - a Warning Signal
Broadening tops are classic patterns which even today still have a
significance that should not be underestimated. They rarely occur and
characterise situations in which large market participants are beginning to
leave the market or have already done so. This results in chaotic-looking
oscillations that are difficult to interpret. Broadening tops occur at the end of
long upward movements. They are characterised by five diverging
oscillations that are difficult for traders to interpret. A retracement follows
afterwards, which in most cases makes up 40 - 60% of the last downswing.
This pattern was first described in detail by Richard M. Schabacker. He is
regarded as the real father of Technical Analysis. In his work "Technical
Analysis and Stock Market Profits"(annex) he gives examples from 1928 to
1936 and explained the fundamental background. Broadening Tops always
occur when liquidity is depleted and large market participants leave the
market. There are no bottoms in the opposite sense to other chart patterns.
The following chart caught my attention in the afternoon of 20.2.20
Broadening tops are sometimes called "megaphones" but it is not necessarily
the same. A real Broadening Top is only created when both the high and low
of each swing form a new extreme. BT's are easiest to locate if you number
the beginning of each swing with numbers from 1 - 5
Figure 58: E-Mini S&P 20.2.20 (60 min. chart, CET)
With every new low/high the next number begins. The pattern is complete
when there is a downswing from point 5 which reaches below the low of
point 4. I have marked this with a horizontal line. Normally the closing price
of the last downswing must be below point 4. But the last part of
Downswing No.5 was so violent in this case, that it became obvious that
something special had happened here.
Afterwards the already mentioned retracement followed. This reaches in
most cases 40 - 60% of the price fluctuation from point 4 to point 5. Often
you can see two last upswings which form the retracement. In this case it was
a bearish zigzag. In the following days the S&P experienced a sell off in a
way not seen before. By the end of the following week it had lost almost 600
points.
Grafik 59: E-Mini S&P end of February 2020 (60 min. chart, CET)
In this book, possibilities were shown how to work with flexible volume
profiles and keep an eye on the big picture. An order flow day trader, who
takes just a few important things of chart technique into consideration, did
not need to know anything about Broadening Tops. All he had to do was plot
a trading range plus volume profile, note the false breakout upwards and
extend the POC of the flexible volume profile before the start of the
following main session. Although a ricochet only occurred here at the end of
the main trading session, he would have had a very good idea about the
direction of the next few days, as we were dealing with a 60 minute chart.
Figure 60: E-Mini S&P end of February 2020, (60 min. chart, CET)
After the fake breakout OTF Sellers acted highly aggressive. The time
volume spike in the sub chart shows this. Now the Broadening Top was
completed. I have taken this example to show how helpful flexible volume
profiles can be in combination with some technical knowledge. Again I mean
trading ranges. They are extremely important. This is where the potential for
future movements is created. If you know how to plot and interpret them, you
can get signals that are very important. And it was the same here. The
extended POC of the volume profile indicated the beginning of one of the
sharpest corrections in the history of the stock markets. This example once
again underlines the main theses of this book.
Every major trend begins with turning points on a small time frame (Got
it now?)
If you observe the false breakout from the trading range shown in the last
chart more closely, then you will also see a broadening top here, which would
have been very visible at a smaller time frame. This would have provided
further confirmation.
A beginning trend is always the best starting point for a day trader, but
this is true for everything. When your neighbor starts to talk about something,
the trend is already old. In chapter 13 volatility thresholds were shown, which
in my experience seem to make sense. On this day a volatility phase started,
which forms the V and L optimum shown at the beginning of this chapter.
Only more than 14 days later the upper limit of the volatility threshold was
reached. At this point, day traders ran into the fire of an exuberant volatility,
which was fueled like a bush fire by the dried up liquidity.
19. Complete Examples
The high volatility of the markets in 2020 makes it more difficult to find
reference zones resulting from past days. The overall trend is often not
clearly defined and can change quickly. Therefore, this book also presented
methods to use volume profiles highly flexibly within intraday segments.
At the end of the main part of my book, I would like to present a few
current examples, which contain all the elements described in this book. A
daytrader should never act spontaneously or prematurely, but always take as
many probabilities as possible on his side before he considers a trade.
He must always find a story that is made up of a puzzle and patiently wait
for promising situations. The art is to constantly switch between time frames
and profiles. It would be too easy if you always assumed a fixed 30-60
minute profile based on the 5/4/3/2/1 previous days and then constantly
expected meaningful reference points for the current day. But even with that
there are good opportunities as you could see over large parts of the book
All the following examples were analysed without DOM Ladder, Smart
Tape, Heatmap, VWAP, Multi Trading Screens, Tick charts, Range charts,
Big Trades, Speed of Tape, Betha xyz systems or other feature. In order to
localise the promising situations shown here, no colourful basket of analysis
tools was needed, but a few important basic knowledges of charts, volume
and market profile, delta and footprints. However, this does not mean that
everything was super easy.
If you go to a forest to pick mushrooms, you don't need to know all
the varieties. Only the poisonous ones!
The focus should always be on an orderly approach, which includes as
many marginal factors as possible and tries to classify them. Everything
should be kept as simple as possible.
19.1 Yen
We will now come to a special form of reversal. This is a clash between two
major market participants. I have chosen the yen future as an example. It
corresponds to the JPY/USD currency pair. In forex trading, this is usually
shown in reverse as USD/JPY. The yen future requires a little experience and
is not a popular trading instrument for many traders, but at times it delivers
more dynamic movements than EUR/USD. It can also be used to judge the
authenticity of movements in the stock market. The yen has a reputation as a
crisis currency, but this is based more on its carry trade function, another
issue. In the chapter on the characteristics of individual trading instruments, I
forgot to mention that this currency pair also reacts strongly at times to
changes in the US interest rate structure.
The following example is not for weak-nerve traders, but it was clearly
and safely calculable. The yen future had made a downswing at the end of
August, which was completely covered on the next chart with a flexible
volume profile on a 15 minute chart. The extended POC of this profile
showed a "normal" rebound movement after the opening of Asian trading.
Figure 61: Yen Future August 2020 (15 minute chart, CET)
The rebound movement visible here through the arrow offered a good
opportunity for day traders based in Asia to take up a profitable short
position. The day before had already provided an opportunity when the Yen
Future made a quick recovery rally after bouncing off the lower high volume
cluster of the profile. The Yen Future is not a trading instrument for every
day, but provides dynamic movements every now and then
On the new trading day on the right side of the chart, there was a sudden
sharp rise half an hour before US main trading hours. However, this stopped
near the 3 day high. The resistance of the high volume area in the upper left
part of the chart was also only broken halfheartedly. A daytrader who has an
eye on the yen would have immediately switched to a 1 minute time frame
now. In this case I now show the Delta numbers, but it could also be the
Footprint.
Figure 62: Yen Future August 2020 (1 min. Chart, CET, CET)
Here you can see strong institutional sales during the rise on the left. OTF
sellers sold into the rising market. However, other OTFs must have bought. A
clash of interests. A divergence formed on the Delta chart. In such a situation
it is important that this divergence is resolved.This happened in the marked
area (ellipse and cursor) At exactly this time the POC (black window in the
marked area) also fell and many red delta numbers appeared on the main
chart. On the Footprintchart you would see a stacked imbalance at the same
time. OTF's started to sell aggressively. In such situations, an immediate
short entry should be made which is automatically linked to a stop-loss order
(bracket order). However, you should first switch on a news ticker and check
whether there is any "unscheduled news". You had about 20 minutes time for
this. The economic calendar did not show any publication of important data.
In this situation you had several factors behind you
- The resistance at the VP AND the 3 day high could not be broken.
- Footprint and Deltachart showed aggressive sellers
- Falling POC
- Resolution of a delta divergence
Such trades are not for beginners, but also not too difficult if you have a
timetable and do not react hectically. You had enough time to analyse the
situation. I show this example because there are different types of traders and
this book is also read by trading colleagues in Asia who trade USDJPY.
Every trader has to find a style and trading Instrument that suits him or her
best. More about this can be found in the bonus chapter.
Again, a trader would not have committed a risk violation because he
would have checked the situation and would have been able to control it with
a stoploss when entering. The Yen is also tradable as a micro contract.
However, only the most liquid market phases are considered for this. But it is
a good trading instrument that can provide quick intraday trends from time to
time, if you know it sufficiently. I do not want to advocate the yen, but it is
an instrument which offers 3 peak trading times during a 24h period, good for
asian based traders.
19.3 Fdax
In this example, the Fdax had made another leg down the day before after a
consolidation phase in a downward trend. The previous day's market profile
formed a selling tail, indicating that institutional traders were still interested
in holding short positions and bringing the market down a bit more.
I have projected the market profile here once again with letters. Actually
you only need to remember the letters A and B. But the single prints
(imbalances) and the initial balance can be displayed in colour on the block
system.
Figure 66: FDAX July 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
After the opening of institutional trading at 9.00 CET, the FDAX remained
within the previous day's value area. Now, yesterday's VPOC is being
extended, because a short trade in the sense of a ricochet would perhaps be a
good idea there. At 10.45 the price reached this zone for the first time. The
index was not able to overcome this resistance. However, a review at a
smaller time frame did not provide any signals on the Footprint chart or the
Delta chart Order Flow that clearly supported a short trade. Now we can wait
for a second bounceback. This became visible 15 minutes after the opening of
US trading. Again a smaller time frame is switched on to look for a low risk
short trade.
Figure 67: FDAX end of July 2020 (3 min. chart, CET)
On the 3 minute chart you can see an accumulation set-up. Shortly before the
hoped for second bounceback took place you can see a delta divergence near
the zero line. For the Dax the cum Delta zero line plays a preferred role.
Smart money started selling just before the US opening, but at the same time
staged a false breakout from the trading range upwards to catch the stops at
the round 12,500 barrier. This is not uncommon with the Dax, as it is the
most "optioned" index in the world, with thousands of warrants that are
knocked out when important levels are crossed. This kind of procedures can
trigger unpredictable fluctuations (not so “unpredictable” for the sellers of
knock out products…lol). This is what foreigners (I am German) who like to
trade the Dax should know, because it is a different situation compared to
other main indices. Apart from this the later afternoon the index no longer
has a life of its own.
With the opening of the US market the Fdax. US Opening phases are
usually volatile. OTF`s sold immediateley after the POC of the previous day
war reached again. It was a good indication that this zone had held. What else
could be observed? The POC of the flexible volume profile did not even start
to rise when the price made a false breakout before the US opening. OTF
sellers were still in control. After the volatility had eased, two candles were
seen near the arrow that could be considered for a trade. Now take a look at
the Footprint Chart, as further confirmation is needed.
Figure 68: Footprint FDax (3 min. chart, CET)
The double-digit numbers of sold contracts show how little liquidity this
future really has compared to the E-Minis or Hang Seng.
On the small time frame, the Footprint showed stacked imbalances for
both eligible candles and afterwards one larger seller for each. The POC of
the second candle fell (black window). This pointed to further weakness.
Now nothing hindered a trade entry. All criteria had pointed to a profitable
trade. The initial risk was 20 points, the profit about 200 points, because the
order flow tools gave no reason to exit earlier. It is worth waiting for this type
of trade. You do not have to trade every day. To much trading is a big
problem for many daytraders. In this situation, a given scenario had been
worked out, which had bee planned before. If this would not have happened,
one would not have acted at all.
- The big picture had indicated the market direction
- The small picture had confirmed this
- Orderflow tools confirmed that Other Time Frame Sellers were still in
control
In this book you could learn that after 1 - 2 long candles you should think
about a possible trading range. This is exactly what you see here at the Bund
Future. The trading range extended over three days. This is a crucial point,
when it comes to assess the further situation. In the morning of September 1st
you looked at the 30 min. chart with a triple bottom exactly two hours after
the opening. Enough time to evaluate the situation and think about a trading
plan.
Figure 69: German Bund August / September 2020 (30 min. chart, MEZ)
As always you would switch to a smaller time frame now. As Bund Future is
a slower market a 5 min. Time frame would serve.
Figure 70: Footprint German Bund August / September (5 min. chart,
CET )
At 10.55 CET (CET) the 5 minute Footprint Chart showed a clear stacked
imbalance. By this I mean that it was precisely in this zone that buyers
outperformed sellers by far more than three times (lift the ask). Prior to this, a
delta divergence can be seen, which dissolved at exactly the time when the
imbalance emerged. You can also see that the POC had now risen (ellipse).
15 minutes later a very large OTF buyer appeared. An upward trend began,
which continued until the end of trading. In the afternoon there was another
opportunity in the form of a follow-up set-up (chapter 10.1)
19.5 A Day with Crude Oil
Figure 71: Light Sweet Crude September 2020 ( 1 min. chart, MEZ)
19.6 Gold
Among commodities, crude oil and gold are the main trading instruments.
Unfortunately, the popular product silver is not as well tradable as gold as a
future because it has insufficient liquidity.
There are good filters for precious metals that can be displayed in charts in
an uncomplicated way. In the case of precious metals, it may also be a good
idea to buy first-class mining shares via CFD and keep them longer if
situations arise that point to a resumption of the trend. Gold is also traded as a
forex pair.
On 26th of August 20 gold made a new bottom squeeze similar to the one
described in chapter 8.2 (Fig.19) Here the strongly traded December contract
was used as a basis.
Figure 74: Gold August 2020 (60 min. chart, UTC-1)
After an all-time high at the beginning of the month, gold made its usual
sharp correction. The market profile showed a buying tail and a single print
zone pointing to OTF buyers. These initially pushed the price upwards. Gold
then went into a seasonal summer break. A D profile was formed. Its
significance was discussed several times. Here you can see alternating
bounce backs of value area high and low. At the end of August a 3-week low
was triggered. A bottom squeeze pattern is also characterized by falling highs
but no lows. This was roughly the case here before the start of Comex main
trading hours on 26.8. Chartists now saw a descending triangle, which
according to the theory of classical technical analysis is a bearish signal. Now
that the false breakout occurred, the following picture is presented on a small
time frame.
Figure 75: Gold August 2020 (5 min. chart)
Here a situation arose which I have tried to describe in more detail in the
important chapter 12.3.2. Power Delta Setups with absorption are the best
signals in Bottom Squeezes, because here many trend followers are trapped
before. How do you see this in this situation? The price is already making
new highs, but Delta's willingness to buy is hanging back. As always, we are
looking for a final confirmation on the Footprint, the last link in the
chain!Figure
76: Gold August 2020, 5 min. Footprint
After the delta divergence had resolved at 15.00 CET, a stacked imbalance
(window) can be seen. Shortly afterwards a strong buyer entered the market.
Gold moved in only one direction on this trading day and posted a gain of
$36. Almost too much for a daytrader.
This book also mentioned Broadening Tops and one of my filters for strong
trends. The following examples show situations where these special setups
provided important information. On 23.9.20 you could see at the E-mini S&P
that a Broadening Top had developed in a smaller time frame. The following
graphic first shows the overall picture of this day.
19.8 EURUSD
In October, EURUSD bottomed out over a period of two days. No new low
was reached. At the beginning of day 3 there was a second bounce back.
MPOC and VPOC were briefly undercut at the start of trading. An SHS
pattern was faked. Delta gave a long signal. On the Footprint, from 9.15
onwards, you could see imbalances and large buyers, a simple trade.
Do not get stressed in day trading, just wait for these opportunities.
Figure 80: Footprint 3 min. chart
So much for this overview of the many possibilities that profile and order
flow analysis can offer. I hope that the last chapter in particular will help you
understand why you cannot and should not always follow the same pattern.
All approaches shown here require a thinking trader who does not shoot from
the hip like the mass of day traders. The big advantage of the methods
described here is that you follow a step-by-step plan. Although this is day
trading, in all cases you have enough time to eliminate as many risk factors as
possible and not to trade blindly. It is the secret of this book.
All other forms of investment always have excuses when it comes to
justifying erroneous assessments in retrospect. Experts in particular tend to be
reluctant to admit a mistake and always have excuses at hand. They would
only have made a mistake at the time, something unforeseen had come up or
they would have made a mistake but "for the right reasons". They are often
blinded by their brilliance (Kahnemann, annex).
The methods described here leave less room for excuses, because you do
nothing without a concrete confirmation. Furthermore, you find out the result
of your efforts after only a few minutes. Your own opinion does not count,
because it is not the retail trader who determines the direction of the market.
Of course, prediction errors will also occur with the methods described here,
because the world is anything but predictable. However, a subjectively
colored opinion when trading is far more dangerous. It is not an indicator of
correctness. Unsystematically accumulated knowledge leads to wrong
decisions. It tempts people to get an increased illusion of abilities, which can
easily lead to overestimation.
Perhaps for this reason the loser rate of academics who try trading is
disproportionately high. They want precise reasons for everything and tend to
put their opinions in the first place. Day trading is not a science in which you
always work according to the same pattern. It is an art of relating certain
situations to the right time frame. There is no generally valid pattern, because
markets are constantly changing.
As a trader today you are confronted with a task that traders of past years
or even generations hardly had. In 2020 volatility has returned to the markets
and I see no reason why this should change now. What used to happen in a
month can now happen in a day. There is no doubt that the entire financial
system is heading for change at some point. Nobody knows what is coming.
Looking at the history of evolution, it has always been the small and most
adaptable species that have survived. Day traders, who master their craft will
be among them. Day trading is one of the very few possibilities to adapt to all
market conditions in a highly flexible way.
In this book I discussed the weak points of Technical Analysis. However,
this is not meant negatively and I will continue to substantiate this in the
bonus chapter with excerpts from my trading library. It is an undeniable fact
that no method is able to work forever and ever when fundamental factors
have changed. You can't steer a car if you just look in the rear-view mirror.
If you follow the approaches shown here then you should definitely adapt
them to your personal style. This is also discussed in the bonus chapter. This
makes you independent of a stereotypical mass of retail trader’s right from
the start. Without VP and order flow analysis, day traders will always dig like
a mole in the dark. If you apply them, you will at least avoid trades that do
not provide OTF confirmations and thus reduce your potential loss rate. This
brings you closer to an essential basic idea of trading. All good traders
distinguish themselves by putting as many probabilities (odds) as possible on
their side in their trading decisions. Only this enables them to be successful in
the long run.
And this leads to the most important point that applies to trading yesterday
and today in general. If you can't find a method that gives you an edge over
others, you can act with motivation and discipline. You will bleed out. I
mention this point because you keep hearing voices that claim: "Everything is
just money management and mindset". If this were really the case, the
percentage of losers would be significantly smaller. There are also many
absolutely disciplined traders who have no money management or mindset
problems. They simply cannot find a constant path to success.
In principle, VP and Order Flow offer an advantage from the start,
because they reveal the traces of dominant market participants. Only those
players move the market. In bonus chapter 23.1 I tried to explain why the
myth of self-fulfilling prophecies has long been dead. It is the main reason
for the high loser rate among technically oriented amateur traders. How do
you know if big traders have really entered the market or are about to let the
mass of traders run into a wall? And how else do you know whether you are
dealing with a real or fake breakout? With VP and Order Flow you will
always have an objective advantage.
Recently, other terms such as VWAP and Heat map have been making the
rounds. I don't use them, because they either generalize too much (VWAP),
are not very tangible (Limit Order) and distract from the actual event. It is not
the mass of tools that produces success. The strategies described in this book
are largely based on a rather simple principle
If something is supposed to happen according to all known methods
of analysis, but does not happen, then opportunities arise.
Also the way in which you design your analysis offers enough variation to
find strategies that best suit your personal style. For example, I work a lot
with flexible volume profiles and Delta If I don't see opportunities that match
my view, I simply don't act. That's it! Accordingly, you don't need to spend
money on level 2 data - feed of the US markets.
No matter what individual approach you take to profile and order flow
trading, it doesn't change the fact that you look at the market from a different
angle than the mass of traders. But the most perfect method only works if it is
adapted to the respective market situation. This book clearly shows that a
correct interpretation of context can make a decisive contribution here.
Order flow trading also offers the possibility of specialization:
Absorption, false outbreaks, trading ranges, double distribution profiles,
weekly profiles, monthly profiles, liquidity zones, top and bottom squeezes,
fake moves, individual markets, specific trading hours, different time frames,
etc. It is you who decides for how long you are willing to pay attention to the
market.
Do you really want to trade every day or would you rather wait for good
opportunities? Do you prefer to trade more aggressively, or are you a very
defensive type? Or do you do both depending on the situation. With which
trading size do you feel most comfortable? How many sub-positions do you
prefer to work with? It can also be about simple things like: Can I concentrate
better in the evening or in the morning? When am I undisturbed? All this may
sound complicated for a beginner.
But if you are able to experiment and make a few notes, you should be
able to find out if day trading is the right thing for you. There are free trial
subscriptions available on every charting software. Once a prospective trader
has understood the basic principle and knows his instruments, he will have to
go his own way from a certain time onwards. This alone gives him the
necessary self-confidence and the strength to implement a trading plan. In the
bonus chapter you will find a bad examples of this. I learn it the hard way! At
that time there was no one I could look over the shoulder of.
There are day traders who sit down in front of the computer in the
morning, have no plan and do things that just come into their heads. Let's see
what the day brings. In addition they also run news channels with "daily
outlooks" or consult with others. Then they spend the whole day in front of
the screen and if they fail, they say: "I should have done this and that. I knew
it." The next day they make the same mistakes. They sabotage themselves.
They save on software and don't know that in the end they lose much more
money with free tools because they don't look any deeper.
It is therefore impossible for me to answer question No. 1: "How much
can I earn with it? It is better to ask yourself questions like:
-Am I able to understand and learn certain things and follow a few rules?
-Do I manage to free myself from assessments that are presented non-stop
on news channels by beautiful faces and smart tie-wearing people?
- Why are there successful traders and why are there losers? Trading is a
business. Why do enterprises fail? Because they do not have the right
concept, do not have sufficient knowledge, do not do research, do not have
ideas and visions, are inflexible and much more.
You can also fail with other things. And today this happens faster than
you think. The same rules apply to day trading. If you are seriously
interested in this field, you have to decide for yourself whether you spend a
lot of time learning outdated theories.
The work on this book took several months with interruptions, because I
wanted to document various stages of the important year 2020 and present as
many highly topical examples as possible. At the end of this main part, you
might wonder whether the methods described here would at some point
become more widely known.
This is not to be expected. This book is completely insignificant in view
of the hundreds of thousands of retail traders who follow trustfully chart
patterns that are beyond an old age. The human brain tends to follow "tried
and tested" methods and behaviors, even if they lack a logical foundation.
Gustave Le Bon wrote in his well- known book about crowd psychology
(annex)
“It takes a long time until theories get implemented in the heads of a
crowd. But even longer to disappear.”
In addition to this, it is a fact that the actions of retail traders are by no
means directional when compared to the total volume.
The year 2020 is now slowly coming to an end. Also in the day trading
sector it brought big changes that were not visible when I started writing this
book. Nevertheless, I have tried to adapt all strategies to a new reality and to
develop some additional ones that take into account the current situation.
If you have read this book so far, thank you for your attention. I hope it could
give you an insight into how a day trader works, integrating MP, VP and
Order Flow Analysis into his work. It is not always the most complicated
methods that lead to success. But also not the easiest!
Questions can be directed to
[email protected]
You cannot learn professional trading from books. For readers who are
interested in acquiring further knowledge, I offer an affordable online course.
For further information, please visit
www.vmo-trading.coachy.net
My best wishes to all readers of this book.
Bonus Chapters
If you consider day trading, there are many unanswered questions. Day
trading is certainly the best of all professions if you love independence and
can find a method that works. But you also have to have certain prerequisites
that are not present in every person. The following three complexes should
help to give answers to perhaps the most important questions that beginners
ask themselves.
Is it possible to do day trading as a working person?
It depends on which time zone you live in and how you can organize your
time.
If you live and work in Europe, you can regularly watch the last 120
minutes of the US markets. If you live in the American time zone, then you
will not have any opportunity in the evening, unless you are interested in
Asian markets. In Asia you have European markets at noon and US markets
in the evening. The greater the choice, the more selective you can work. The
number 1 location for part-time and full-time day traders.
It is often said that swing trading is ideal for working traders. Whoever
analyses and trades over 20 currency pairs and stock indices on 4h charts
with an expectation horizon of several weeks or months must be aware that
the uncertainty factor increases. Prop traders would never do this. Nobel
Prize winner Daniel Kahnemann clearly proved that the significance of
forecasts changes fundamentally in relation to the forecast period.
I have made the same experience and would never consider swing trading
as a single discipline. What looks comfortable superficially can be the most
difficult. Securing existing portfolios is a completely different and very
appropriate matter. But in this case I am talking about trading.
How much money do I need to get started?
A motivated trader can start with a trading account of 10,000 USD and
initially trade the smallest possible units in the form of micro futures. This
book is not about scalping. Accordingly, you can also trade CFD's that offer
transparent matching.
There is no need to emphasize that especially beginners should only trade
with money that is not needed. In view of the current economic crises this is
difficult for many. Most traders fail due to undercapitalization. But even if
you can raise this capital, the first thing you should do is to check yourself if
your knowledge is sufficient. A great number of losses is caused by avoidable
beginner's mistakes. Simulation training can help here. At least it can give
you a feeling for a trading instrument and risks. You should also make sure
that you do not get a drawdown of more than 25%, because then the risk of
wanting to get everything back with one trade increases.
You may hear from time to time of day trading wonder kids who multiply
their account in a year, but this has nothing to do with healthy risk
management.
So what should I know?
You can get tons of free information about the leverage of futures and CFD's,
tick sizes, order types, margins etc. from any broker, financial sites or stock
exchanges. The purpose of this book is not to give an introduction to basic
knowledge, which can be acquired and free of charge in a few days almost
everywhere. Do not listen to information telling you about day trading other
metals than precious metals. Same applies for sugar, coffee, meat,... If you
really want to day trade liquid markets, stay away from Krypto Currencies as
well. May be one day, who knows the future?
With regard to the duration of a learning phase it depends on how
motivated you are and what kind of perceptiveness you have. Technical
analysts learn over several years. A large part is not needed as a volume
trader. Prop Trading companies train professional traders for about 2 months.
My online course contains things that go beyond that, because they have
matured in 20 years of experience.
The golden age of Technical Analysis lasted until the end of the 1980s. At
that time the markets were populated by a large number of different groups.
For example, there were many individual brokerage firms that received
orders from their commercial or private clients and passed them on by
telephone directly to the Open Outcry Pit. Electronic commerce and
globalization was in its infancy. Futures markets were relatively isolated and
difficult for small traders to access due to high margin requirements. Intraday
charts were hardly known. The trading volume was negligible compared to
today. Seasonal influences were much more important for traders than today.
In other words, activity in the markets was made up of a large number of
parties, often on an equal footing.
Chart patterns were less popular but were gratefully accepted and some
traders even drew them by hand. Progressive traders who dealt with charts
recognized an advantage early on. They could easily identify important zones
before the mainstream became interested. If a breakout occurred, it was then
carried by the majority of market participants and took its course. After that,
trends developed that lasted weeks and months and brought great success to
some technically oriented traders of commodity and currency futures.
They traded real breakouts from trading zones using daily and weekly
charts, moving averages, Donchian channels, and later Bollinger Bands.
Indicators came into fashion. One particular pioneer was George Lane, the
founder of the Stochastic Indicator. As a simple man from the Midwest, he
traveled across the country like a preacher and convincingly substantiated his
theories of three runs to the top when others knew nothing more than double
tops. Traders who followed his indicator were successful. It was the golden
age of technical analysis.
At the end of the 80's a change took place. The financial industry became
the leading sector. Everything became more and more centralized and fell
into the hands of a few large institutions. This development has continued
until today. The legitimacy of Technical Analysis is often justified by self-
fulfilling prophecies.
However, self-fulfilling prophecies can only be increasingly fulfilled if
a multitude of smaller market participants are actually able to move the
market.
This is no longer the case today. The myth of self-fulfilling prophecies has
long been dead. If classical patterns appear in a textbook form that is
recognizable to everyone, then many traders are often lured into a trap. This
does not always happen, of course. Even classic chart traders have their
sunshine hours. Casino visitors do not lose every time.
The only way to check if breakouts are real or fake is to use order flow
analysis. The most important fake patterns often consist of a few basic
elements that occur again and again. If you don't want to be a loser right from
the start, it makes sense to ask yourself in certain situations:
Who is winning, who is losing?
If you look at the left side of the chart, you will first see another well-known
chart formation that did not come true. This was a picture-perfect bearish
zigzag formation, which is considered by many traders and chart technicians
to be a significant reversal formation. A trend line can also be drawn on this
chart, which in combination with an incipient double top looked enticingly
like a short position for followers of typical chart patterns. And not only the
broken trend line and the beginning double top gave confidence to chart
traders. Shortly before the double top was completed, another descending
zigzag pattern appeared. If you now look at the candle I marked with the
arrow, you can see that it gained excess length exactly when the two peaks of
the suspected double top were crossed. This is exactly where the traders' stop
loss orders were triggered. This type of momentum candlestick is a good
confirmation that many traders were involved.
Now let's look at the pairs of candles that started the counter movements
on this chart (circle). In both cases these were so-called Inside Ranges. In this
type of combination the last candle is inside the previous one. Inside Ranges
have no meaning in isolation? However, if they occur in situations like this,
they indicate that the market is hesitant to follow its previous direction. The
inside candle on the left at the beginning of the trend line is a doji. Dojis have
a similar meaning when they become visible at the end of a movement.
However, these combinations should not be given a general meaning. This
is a 5 minute chart. If you would switch it to a smaller time frame, you would
see a different pattern. Then it would be an ascending Zigzag pattern. This
would also have been acceptable here. In this case it was trend line, double
top and zigzag traders who were on the wrong side.
The more groups of retail traders there are who are fooled, the greater
the subsequent movement.
The shoulder - head - shoulder pattern is, along with double tops and
bottoms, the best known reversal formation in chart technique. Just like
double tops and bottoms, this formation was already defined 100 years ago.
In the following decades it became so extremely popular that some traders
still try to get a meaning out of it even if it is similar to a Hydra. This is often
subject to a purely subjective perception and can lead to adventurous trading
decisions.
The high degree of popularity also often makes this chart pattern the
plaything of large market participants. In principle, the interests of smart
money do not necessarily need to differ from those of retail traders with
regard to the future direction of the market. In such a case, they simply try to
throw as many competitors out of the race as possible. For many traders this
leads to highly frustrating experiences, which sound something like this: "I
knew that the market would fall. If only I had put my stop a little further!"
Now next time the trader tries to "give his trade more room" and is wrong
again, because the situation in this case may be completely different and the
trade may turn out to be a smooth mistake from the beginning. This topic is
discussed in the bonus chapter. Frustrated again, he now turns to a fashion
indicator like the ATR, which "calculates" where to place his stop,
independent of the specific trading situation.
In doing so, he neutralizes the superior ability of the human brain to link
connections in a contextual way and transfers the responsibility to a
system that can only count trees but cannot see the forest.
Variant 1 - Hunchback Pattern
Similar to the Backfire Pattern, traders of SHS patterns tend to place their
stop loss points above/below the last shoulder tip. Often this is stopped out,
only to return shortly afterwards to the direction that was expected when the
original pattern appeared. In this way a hump is created visually on the chart.
Figure 84: Fdax Oktober 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
After formation of the right shoulder many amateur traders went short they
"suspect" the formation of an SHS pattern. Market makers observe this on
their systems. If there are enough traders, then they create a second shoulder
that is higher. Now chart traders are snooped out, because they usually put
their stop loss over the right shoulder.
Grafik 85: EURUSD, September 2020 (5 min. chart, CET)
Here you can see a SHS pattern running diagonally upwards. This variant is
very popular with supporters of this chart formation, because it allows an
early entry. However, afterwards a second higher shoulder was formed. This
ended with an inverted candle and was enough to scare off traders who
believed in an SHS pattern. The following black long momentum candle
emerged at the exact moment when traders panicked to cover because "their"
pattern seemed to be destroyed.
Now a clear trend line break to the downside occurred. Again the joy did
not last long. With the beginning of the institutional trading, the tables were
cleared once again. This became visible on the order flow in the form of a
clear rejection with stacked imbalance. Once again, several groups of traders
were involved, who took different entry points. SHS traders, trend line
traders who saw a break in the trend line downwards, but also double bottom
traders who suspected an end of the correction.
The repeatedly appearing strong momentum candles when breaking
typical stop loss points prove that there are surprisingly many traders who
apply chart patterns in isolation.
Variant 2
Figure 86: Gold September 2020 (5 min chart, CET)
In this case, market makers initially faked a breakout, but immediately went
aggressively in the opposite direction. Such patterns are very common and
can offer very good opportunities to day traders looking for fake patterns
confirmed by VP and order flow. If SHS patterns appear particularly easily
recognizable in textbook style and do not show a follow through, then you
can think of the opposite direction when you see candles pointing to a
reversal. Again you can see an Inside Range. Added to this is the fact that
millions of retail traders prefer to follow trend lines. The combination of a
broken trend line and SKS pattern made this situation particularly attractive
for a large mass of retail traders.
The most significant and therefore most profitable opportunities for traders
always occur when a final movement reaches a new mainstream high or low
and a trend continuation is faked. Bottom squeezes are particularly interesting
in bull markets, because in this cases you have a big fundamental factor in
your back from the start. In a bull market, you should always pay attention
when significant corrections take place.
Gold has seen increasing trading liquidity over the last 18 months.
Significant movements occurred not only during the main Comex trade, but
also with the beginning of the European and especially Asian trading period.
Oil is also a typical market for bottom squeezes. However, this has a
completely different fundamental reason. While in gold, increased demand
was the main reason for a price increase, in oil many hedgers liquidate their
short positions when their objectives of hedging against a price decline are
achieved.
Figure 87: Bottom Squeeze Comex Gold June 2020 (60 min. chart, CET)
Here we see a clear SHS fake pattern shortly after the beginning of the Asian
trading period, which also leads to a typical bottom squeeze. The most
powerful bottom squeezes in stockmarket history consisted of failed SHS
patterns like this. That´s why I show them here. This pattern is worth to keep
in mind, when looking for a Bottom Squeeze Trade
Power Bottom
A Power Bottom occurs when there is a truly explosive and profitable
movement. This can be caused by a cover of hedges or by a fundamental
demand. In the following example monetary policy reasons could also play a
role, but this is irrelevant for a day trader, as long as he does not trade at the
same time as the publication of news.
Figure 90: Gold (15 min. chart, CET)
Here, a particularly well defined zigzag pattern stands out, which led many
market technicians to take short positions. As the stop loss points of these
traders were exceeded, great momentum candles were formed. Again 3
components come together here.
- Traders trading a breakout down
- Traders who follow a well-known chart pattern
- Price has fallen below a low point of the previous day
Top Squeeze Pattern
Top Squeeze Patterns are the most spectacular Fake Patterns, because
downward movements often occur many times faster than upward
movements. Many normal traders are overwhelmed with the timing of such
patterns. This has several reasons.
- Top squeeze patterns require good timing
- Research shows that 90% of all traders have never traded on the short side.
- Most textbooks and even "stock market wisdom" say that you should never
try to get the top or the bottom of a movement.
A day trader who specializes in fake moves is not well off with these advices.
Top squeezes require great attention and excellent timing, as in many cases
they are not as easy to spot as bottom squeezes, which are less explosive.
Like all current examples shown in this chapter, top squeezes in particular are
preceded by classic chart patterns that deceive the mass of traders.
Figure 91: E-Mini S&P September 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
This chart is particularly suitable for showing the unreliability of trend lines.
In this case we were dealing with a big top squeeze where all the stops were
taken. First of all, you can see here an exactly pronounced tend-channel,
which had developed in the off-peak period (1). This is where the roots were
laid for the traps, which then snapped shut during the main session.
Around the low volume European midday a new daily high was formed,
which then changed into a clearly visible SHS pattern on a higher 15 minute
time frame (2). After this pattern broke downwards as expected by many
traders, a breakout from the trend channel followed, which brought more
traders on board to take short positions. With the opening of the US markets
this expectation was disappointed. But there was another hope. At the weak
US lunchtime a new SHS pattern was forming on a larger scale.
Again, many traders went short when this pattern was broken and were
wrong, because a few sharp movements in the opposite direction immediately
followed. Last but not least, there were traders who saw a breakout from a
trend line (3) and went long. A several day high was quickly reached and
drove all traders holding short positions out of the market. A single rapid
upward thrust had driven them out of the market. Afterwards the longs of no.
3 were the last victims of their trend line theories
Typical for Top Squeezes is the speed of the final movement before
changing direction.
Again, in this case, it was several classic patterns that failed in advance
and provided clear indications that many traders were on the wrong side of
the market. The false breakout to a new high about 90 minutes before the
close of institutional trading.
Highs or lows lasting several days or even weeks are the zones where
most market participants meet. In the golden age of technical analysis, these
were points where more breakouts occurred. Today, however, these are
points that can also develop a strong momentum in the opposite direction.
Regardless of this, it does not fit well into the concept of dominant market
participants buying "above value” at extreme points.
Each of the situations shown here has its own history. What they all have
in common, however, is that they were identified by fake moves and occurred
in important liquidity zones. The following large picture shows another
situation of a top squeeze.
Figure 92: Euro FX Future, September 2020 (30 min. chart, CET)
The large picture here showed a new multi-day high in the early European
morning. This gave a day trader enough time to analyze this situation and to
consult the profiles and order flow. Do not forget to plot the market profile in
these cases.
Another rule that every prospective trader learns is to place stop loss points
near "natural" zones. On the following chart you can see such a situation.
Figure 93: German Bund, September 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
Here a SHS pattern was formed, which for friends of this pattern could hardly
have looked nicer. At first a breakout downwards was faked. Institutional
traders had placed themselves long. Brave day traders could have followed
them and would have been in the market with a stop loss below the absolute
low of this deception. Look at the momentum candle which formed when the
SHS Pattern became invalid
Trend line fakes are another way to lure retail traders into a trap. As you have
seen, they usually occur in combination with many of the fake patterns shown
here. Furthermore, trend lines bear a great psychological danger for a trader.
If they do not meet the expectations of a trader, then they are simply adapted
to the new circumstances. If this does not fit either, then you simply look for
another fix point. The same applies to so-called trend channels. Depending on
the current situation, they simply slip on one side, a dilettante way of
manipulating yourself.
After all, trend lines are drawn by most retail traders. It is so simple and
sounds logical to connect three points and then conclude that a trend has
formed. And then, breaches of the trend line are traded. If these take place
and have no follow through, then you wait for a pullback. If this does not take
place either, then the position is abandoned.
Double Trend line Fakes
On the next chart everybody has being fooled, who draw “something”. I have
used this example to show that market makers also like to use geometric
shapes such as triangles, pennants, wedges and flags to fool as many traders
as possible who think they can use a ruler to predict the future direction of the
market. This was an SHS pattern, a triangle and trend lines. None of them
brought success. But what was the only pattern which worked after the tip of
the triangle had been reached?
(Tip: Chapter 18)
Graph 94: E-Mini Nasdaq (5 min. chart, CET)
Here too, at the best trading time, several groups of day traders who were
wrong in their assessment were forced to cover. The first group seemed to
have drawn a trend line on the left side of the chart and had gone long on its
break. They had placed their stop loss under a pin bar, which appeared just
before the break of the trend line to the top. Pin bars are described in
countless books as reversal signals at the end of swings.
However, if they do not appear in a suitable context, as here, they have no
meaning as do candlestick patterns. Another group of traders had afterwards
seen a double bottom pattern or an ascending zigzag pattern with doji. As
usual the double bottom traders set their stop loss just below the two bottoms.
The double bottom was now completed, but the market stopped after only
40 points afterwards. A black reversal candle became visible. At the same
time this candle formed an outside range. A fast short entry with only 30
points stop loss was possible. A Momentum candle also appeared shortly
afterwards. I have called this candle "Bull Squeeze". This formed exactly
when the "wrong" pin bar was undercut.
This was no coincidence, but a further confirmation that many traders had
set their stop loss here. In this case, you could set your stop loss to break even
just 3 minutes after entering, because it was clear that a bull trap had been
snapped shut. As a result the Mini Hang Seng lost 300 points in about 20
minutes. Trading does not need not be complicated.
Here we see on day 2 that at the beginning of institutional trading all stop loss
points of the non-institutional trading hours of the previous day and night
were triggered. Once again a "promising" SHS Fake Pattern appeared first.
Afterwards a daily rally of about 200 points developed. On day 3 you see the
same game with reversed signs. Now all stops from 17.30 of the previous day
are cleared and the market moves down 200 points without interruption. Who
were the victims? Amateur traders who have no knowledge of appropriate
trading hours and who had gone short either because they saw a double top or
long because they suspected a breakout to the top.
Figure 97: Dow Jones September 2020 (15 min. chart, MEZ)
As almost always, a trend line fake (upwards) preceded the event here. But
this did not bring any loss. Afterwards all stops of non-institutional trading
were cleared in one go. The Mini - Dow Jones Future fell by about 500 points
during the course of the day.
Take out Yesterday's High / Low - the Classic
This is the classic among the Stop Runners and appears in every index. The
following also contains a mixture of Backfire, Hunchback and Trend line
Fake
Figure 98: Nasdaq 100 Future September 2020 (15 min. chart, CET)
Summary:
Fake moves are a wide area. Markets can at times present themselves in a
chaotic shape. But there are also market phases in which classic chart patterns
or breakouts from key zones can be seen, which in combination attract a large
number of retail traders. In these cases you should definitely take a closer
look at the overall context and look for further indications in the Profiles and
Order Flow. A day trader who specializes in such situations does not need to
be active every day. However, every now and then he gets the best of the best
presented. A further advantage is that he gets an immediate answer on the
correctness of his actions, because stop running maneuvers are characterized
by an increased speed and sharp reversals. A Momentum candle gives quick
confirmation in all cases and can offer a second chance to traders who prefer
a more defensive style
23. What is a Trend?
Trend is the favorite word of traders, but also of investors. The definitions of
a trend are numerous. Diagonal lines with three points of contact, channel,
moving averages with crossovers depending on the point of view, double
tops/bottoms, broken SHS neck line, breakout from a trading range,
zigzagging, primary trend, secondary trend, test of top, test of bottom,
confirmed, unconfirmed...
What can a day trader do with it? Very little. Even if one of these
definitions reveals itself as a trend, it is by no means in the realm of any
human being to predict what will happen next. Why should a reality-oriented
day trader deal with the ballast of calculations and projections of all kinds if
nobody can predict the future anyway? Is it not difficult enough to recognize
deception?
William Dunnigan was one of the outstanding spirits of the Golden Age of
Technical Analysis. During his long creative period he was in contact with
the greatest analytical minds of his time. (Livermore, Jackson, Schabacker,
Rhea…) His book "One - Way Formula for Trading in Stocks &
Commodities"(10) was published in 1957 and is considered one of the
shining examples of the technical view of price fluctuations.
After decades of trying to find trend definitions such as the always
controversial Dow Theory tried, Dunnigan came up with an amazingly
simple definition of a trend in his last work, which he regarded as universal
for all markets. He believed that you shouldn't make a mountain out of a
molehill and defined the possibility of a beginning trend in two ways. He left
it up to the market to decide which of his two main options it would take
when starting a new trend and gave equal importance to both.
- A market makes a rising bottom from and closes above the top of the last
secondary movement. He called this ASC = Ascending Bottom. The trend is
valid unless ASC gets nullified. With a top reversal this would be a
descending top (DES = Descending Top).
- A market penetrates two previous peaks from a mainstream low and
closes above them. He called this P2T = penetration of 2 tops (bottom
reversal). A possible top reversal is defined when the market penetrates two
previous bottoms from a mainstream high and closes below. How this
ultimately looks like on the chart is completely irrelevant.
Dunnigan implemented his ideas with weekly charts and only used HLC
bar charts (High, Low, Close). For him the law of inertia (= momentum) was
the most important thing. He was absolutely right, because without Follow
Through any form of clear price action is impossible. Considering the fact
that the trading volumes at that time were negligible compared to today,
Dunnigan's principles based on HLC weekly charts can easily be transferred
to today's intraday charts.
I will save myself showing variation A here, because this is a common
ascending or descending zigzag pattern that appears at the end of a
movement. My mentor also shared this idea. He asked for another correction
to confirm a trend.
Actually, this idea of a beginning of a trend in the shape of zigzags
originates from Robert Rhea, who was the most prominent representative of
the second Dow Theory generation. He referred to the Dow Jones Industrial
and believed that the probability of a reversal was highest in the case of a
lower second peak (top) and vice versa (rising bottom).
If you follow this trend definition, it was always a problem for me to
decide whether to trade a simple zigzag formation or to wait for another
confirmation in form of a mini correction as my mentor suggested. If you
wait for all kinds of confirmation on a chart, you quickly lose track of the
market participants you want to follow. Now to Variant
B
Figure 99: Variant B
This is a beginning intraday trend of EURUSD on a 5 minute chart. Of
particular interest on this chart is the fact that each time the momentum
develops its greatest strength when the last two tops of a previous movement
are crossed to the upside. In the lower part, trend traders cover in panic,
creating additional momentum, when the two tops were taken out. Regardless
of this, this common example also shows that over 70% of the total price
action takes place in sideways zones. It is just interrupted by two powerful
moves.
Similar situations can be observed on countless charts in this book. In
some examples I have called this situation a squeeze. If it occurs, you can
speak of a power bottom or power top, which is confirmed by the increase in
momentum when the marked tops are penetrated. These are the stop losses of
those traders who are wrong and get stopped out. In many cases they give the
momentum an extra boost as seen in the middle of this chart.
Dunnigan referred to follow up trades as "repeat signals". These
occurred when a price, after overcoming new resistance, made a correction
that did not close below the starting point. His operational plan comprised
two parts. Fund L (longer term profits) remained in the market until a trend
was nullified by regaining an ASC, DES or mainstream High (Low). Fund S
was used variably for repeat signals and liquidated when small profits were
available.
When I read this book about 15 years ago I switched my day trading
charts to HLC bar charts for a while. I found out that results with simple
HLC Bar charts where the same if not better. Hence I never felt any need to
learn about the special meaning of all these exotic names of isolated
candlestick formations. I only use candlesticks anyway because they are
simpler to understand when looking at a chart.
I once talked to a younger trader who enthusiastically followed
candlestick formations. He explained a pattern to me, which he had recently
learned. To me it looked like a simple rounding bottom, but he called it
“Frying pan pattern.” I did not dare to ask him why it wasn´t called “inverted
cucumber formation.”
The concept discussed here are not applicable to every situation like
everything else in trading. But it should give you a fairly good idea about
evolving trends. Dunnigan's ideas from 70 years ago will still exist in another
70 years from here.
24. Trade- and Risk Management
There are many theories about trade- and risk management. These are more
reminiscent of the story of the hunter who sells the fur of a bear before killing
it. Of course, when trading futures, you should only ever use a very small part
of your trading account. This should never exceed 2%. Legends such as Larry
Williams and Richard Dennis, the founder of the Turtle Trader, used 25% or
more of their trading capital for a single trade. These times are past and
would ruin any trading account in a very short time.
But if you follow today's theories, you quickly get the impression that
every success is based solely on trade management and psychology. Apart
from that, it is basically irrelevant which methods are used. Yes, there is the
endowment effect, disposition effect, loss aversion and other problems. Every
trader suffers from some kind of weakness, some of which is even innate. But
these are not the only factors that determine success or failure.
A trader needs a method which enables him to be absolutely convinced
that what he is doing has a hand and foot. This is the only way he gets the
ability to intuitively recognize promising situations. Good traders know after
a short time whether a trade will bring success or whether it will remain a
pipe burst.
Take Profit
In this context, I would like to touch briefly on the take profit issue.
Instead of the clumsy CRV air formulas of classical analytical thinking.
Flexible volume profiles offer an intelligent help here. In this book it was
explained that volume clusters are important support and resistance zones.
Low Volume Zones (Thin Profiles) are therefore the zones of accelerated
movement. After passing through these zones the momentum will
automatically decrease. A take profit order should be placed there. The
following slides should give you an idea about this.
Figure 100: ES May 2020 (5 min. chart)
In this respect, it must be said that there are instruments that at times react
less well to previous low volume clusters. The reason is that stock markets in
particular often change direction several times during the course of the day.
Beginners are recommended to enter a take profit target with three times the
initial risk. If you have a trained eye, you can judge whether a trade is gaining
momentum right after it has started. It is especially important to reach the
zones where retail traders are increasingly stopped out. If you see in these
zones that a follow through with a simultaneous increase in volatility is
taking place, then you should try to trail or build a trade. The following charts
should give you some more ideas. In this respect, it must be said that there
are instruments which at times react less well to previous low volume clusters
Figure 101: EUR USD low volume areas May 2020 (15 min. chart)
The low volume areas on the right side of the chart were quickly crossed
downwards after two typical ricochets.
The 3 most important Rules of Risk Management
Some day traders believe that it is not important where you start a trade. This
may all have been right in times when prices have moved at a snail's pace as
with few interruptions until 2020. Here the carriage is harnessed to the horse.
Especially in view of today’s generally increased volatility, it makes a big
difference whether you are 50 points or more off the Dax or whether you start
from the right foot. The longer an initiated trade remains without follow
through, the higher the risk becomes. The main focus should always be to
keep losses as small as possible, but also not to choke off a trade (see next
chapter). For this purpose you need a trading plan with an entry as exact as
possible. When it comes to timing, order flow strategies offer an irreplaceable
help.
Every day trader also makes bad trades. However, if he recognizes this as
soon as possible, then he is a winner! He has traded completely correctly.
Day trading is not an investment. I will gladly pass on the three most
important rules of day trading free of charge. They are not mine anyway, but
from Market Wizard Ed Seykota:
1. Cut loss
2. Cut loss
3. Cut loss
- If you start a long position and the price makes a higher low but not a higher
high, you should become suspicious
- If you start a short position and the price makes a lower high, but not a
lower low, then you should also become suspicious
Trailing Stops
Here again there are many theories that have little to do with reality. Of
course, trades with a quick follow through without pullback are best, but
unfortunately it is not always the case. I only trail my stop after a clear
movement in the planned direction or as squeeze has taken place. I have tried
to explain this in various sections of this book. It often happens that even a
good trade snaps back, especially in the early stages. This has been
particularly visible for years on EURUSD with the start of European trading.
Whoever trades this instrument knows what I am talking about.
If, on the other hand, I see that a trade is just "fiddling around", then I
prefer to leave the market immediately, whether with a small profit or loss.
Once you have developed a feeling for an instrument, you will no longer
want to become a slave to mechanical systems that only serve the broker. In
trading, nothing is as good as the human brain. If a trade shows no more
power, you get out or close a partial position. There will never be an optimal
solution.
25. Short Term Trading - A Trade Example
Day trading as defined at the beginning of this book requires the closing of a
position on the same day. Swing trading is generally understood to consist of
holding a position overnight. In general, a 4-hour time frame is used here.
From this point of view, short term trading is a hybrid that corresponds to
both trading styles to some extent, but can be used more effectively
depending on the situation. For example, a day trade started in a short time
frame with minimal entry risk can, under optimal conditions, turn into a forex
position trade, which then runs over several days. In such cases, currency
pairs or non-European stock indices, which are traded around the clock with
sufficient liquidity and thus guarantee better risk management with regard to
stop losses, are a suitable option.
In order to describe the aspects mentioned here more clearly, I would like
to show here a real trade that I made in February 2017. This trade does not fit
into either of the two drawers mentioned above. But in certain way it
undermines one of the main aspects of this book
Every trend starts with micro inflection points
The following EURUSD trade was started in a 3 minute time frame with 5
pips risk. This was held for about 3 days and then ended with a dreamlike
risk /return of 16 : 1 (average value of all 3 partial positions). The entry
points of three partial positions have been marked here.
Fig. 102: EURUSD on 17 th of February 2017 (3 min. chart, CET)
On the top we see a pattern, which I have called Backfire Pattern , on the
left side 3 or 4 double tops that fail one after the other. On the right side you
can see that this trade was decided long before the European institutional
trade started. For this reason, I also project EURUSD in volume profiles
generally from 8.00 CET. This trade was made in 2017, but situations of this
kind have arisen in the same way ever since the euro was introduced 20 years
ago. At some point I thought that this would stop, but it hasn't. Each trading
instrument has its own characteristics (chapter 15)
The further Course
On the following hourly chart I have shown the entire three-day trade
process.
Figure 103: EURUSD from 17.2. - 21.2.17 (60 min. chart, CET)
Perhaps real day traders have done the beginning of this trade on day 1 in a
similar way, and thus have booked a nice daily profit. However, the second
day of this trend would have presented them with the first big problems, as it
was only characterized by a whipsaws. In the best case it would have resulted
in a small daily profit for day traders.
A European day trader would have completely missed the biggest part of
this overall movement on day 3, because it was already initiated at the
beginning of the Asian trading hours and completed with the beginning of the
European trading hours. Swing traders use larger time frames by definition.
However, if momentum suddenly increases, these can be an eternity and cost
valuable time before any entry is made. They also would have been severely
disadvantaged.
A position trader who only trades on daily charts would have had to stay
in the market for months to achieve a similar net result if the chart had been
exactly related to his time frame. However, for a professional short term
trader such a time horizon is light years away.
A final word
A day trader, as described in this book, does not need to fear Algos or the
hyenas of the markets, which take a tick off in a fraction of a second with
high frequency trading systems. He trades like a leopard. This animal is
known as a loner. A leopard can compete with any other animal at its speed.
But it is patient and only acts when it is sure of its prey.
1. J.F. Dalton, E.T. Jones, R.P. Dalton, Mind over Markets, ebook
2. Trader Dale, Volume Profile, ebook
3. Richard M. Schabacker, Technical Analysis and Stock Market
Profits, page 110, 137, Pearson 1997
4. Daniel Kahnemann: Schnelles Denken, Langsames Denken,
page 243, 272, Sieder Verlag 2011
5. Gustave Le Bon, Die Psychologie der Massen, page 43, Kröner
Verlag 1982
6. Robert Rhea, Dow Theory, S.95, Snowball Printing 2012
7. William Dunnigan: One - Way Formula for Trading Stocks and
Commodities, page 218 ff. Harriman House Ltd. 2005
Chart Software:
- Atas
- Sierrachart
- Tradeview