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A Great Example Of How To Read Developing Market Activity


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Wednesday Evening  14 July 2010

 We saw an opportunity to take a long position in the Euro, based on a strong volume rally followed by a
retest decline on less volume.  The retest on less volume indicates there is no selling pressure, and that
is a positive sign for a potential rally to follow.  You can see the strong rally bar, second bar after the low
on the 13th.  That wide range up bar was followed by two small range bars that did not retrace much of
the rally off the low.  That sparked our attention.  In a market that is in a rally mode, corrections usually
last 1 to 3 bars.  This one was only two bars, a positive sign for the upside.

 Note how the volume dropped sharply on that two bar decline.  This says that there are few sellers at
that point.  On the first sign of a turnaround, we wanted to get long, and we did buy at 125.77 on the very
next bar.  That will be covered in the second chart.

 What is interesting is how one can read present tense developing market activity to make a decision.
When price made a high around the 127.50 area, back on the 9th, you can see how the market then
corrected, all the way down to the low which caught out attention.

 After establishing a long position, the question then becomes, where to exit?

 We were still long after the rally took price back to the 127.57 high, where a lateral consolidation
developed at an area of resistance.  Take profits or not?

 Not!

 We were aware that the market was consolidating, not correcting.  What is the difference?  In a
consolidation, there is very little price retracement, and that is an indication of underlying market strength.
See how shallow the correction is in a consolidation phase?  On the decline from the 9th, price retraced
about 225 pips.  By contrast, in the consolidation, price corrected only 50 pips, so we expected there was
more upside to be realized.

 Then, what developed was a clear message from the market.  Price dropped under the consolidation to
a low of 126.82.  Could this be the start of a larger correction?  Using a 60 minute time frame, we had to
wait to see where the 60 minute bar closed.  A weak close would get us out.  By the close of the last
60 minute bar on the chart, we had our answer.  The close was on the upper end of the range, and that
tells us buyers were in control.  Adding to that observation was the increased volume.  The increase told
us that buyers were entering on price declines, supporting the market.

 We had our answer from developing market activity.  It was saying that the rally was likely to continue
higher and to hang onto remaining long positions.  There is no better source of market information than
that which is generated by the market itself, in the form of price and volume.  What is significant about
price and volume is that they are proven facts.  Anything and everything else is just potential.

 The next chart shows how the market advertised higher prices.

 

 Euro 60m-1 14 Jul 10

 A long position was established at 125.77, anticipating a rally.  Half the position was liquidated at 126.30.
At the time, the 126.50 area was resistance, and on a 30 minute bar, [not shown], there was a surge in
volume.  It looked like potential stopping action at resistance, hence the exit.  Plus, making 53 pips in a
short span of time was great, given how price had dropped steadily from the 9th.

 By keeping a long position, the rally that followed was a very pleasant surprise.  You can now see that
the "read" of the failed probe did lead to higher prices.  Not shown on a 60 minute chart, we knew there
was an oversold condition starting around 127.74 to just above 128.00 on both the daily and weekly
charts, and that could act as resistance.   We entered an order to sell at 127.85, if the rally were to
continue, and placed a protective sell stop at 127.20 should price reverse.  Getting stopped out on any
reversal to that price guaranteed a profitable trade.

 Price did rally higher to 127.79, and when that happened, the protective stop was raised again to 127.52.
A short while later, the remaining long position was stopped out for a 175 pip gain.  Adding the 53 pip gain
from the first half of the long position, and the trade netted $2,600. 

 The entire trade can be attributed to reading developing present tense market activity and letting it tell
a story.  As it is apparent, the market "tells" very compelling stories.  They all are not this easy to read,
not that this was "easy," but relying on the trend and reading developing market activity gives a much
greater probability of being on the right side of any given trade and minimizing risk exposure when a
trade does not work out as anticipated.

 

Euro 60m-2 14 Jul 10 



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About the author


Michael Noonan is the driving force behind Edge Trader Plus.  He has been in the futures business for 30 years, functioning primarily in an individual capacity.  He was the research analyst for the largest investment banker in the South, at one time, and he managed money
in the cash bond market for a $5 billion pension fund using Peter Steidlmeyer’s Market Profile.

Proficient in Gann, Elliott Wave, Market Profile, etc, Mr Noonan no longer uses any of those technical procedures.  Instead, his primary focus is on developing market activity, relying solely on the information generated by the market itself, such as the interaction between  price and volume, and how they relate to important price levels in the market structure.  He incorporates proven market principles, such as knowledge of the trend, supply and demand, along with disciplined rules for to find developing high probability trade opportunities.

He can be reached by e-mail at his website: mn@edgetraderplus.com

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