Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

Recommended Posts

Hi Traden4x,

 

I am primarily Index Futures (short-term) and Equities trader (Swing). Just started Forex recently. This Harmonic Pattern indicator (still working on it ) I wrote for TS.

 

Regards,

Suri

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I've been working on research for several of the patterns and looking at other patterns. I've been looking at time and price completion trying to evaluate the standard accepted values to see if there are better ratios that are seen more often.

 

I hope to create a better indicator for identifying the patterns from all of this. I'm interested to hear your experiences.

 

Cheers,

Carl

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Hi Traden4x,

 

This Harmonic Pattern indicator (still working on it ) I wrote for TS.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

Suri,

Tim Morge, the Median Line expert uses 10,000 volume bars for the S&P.

And our local expert, Steve46 uses 2400, 10,000 volume bars for his pattern recognitions.

Do you find any value in volume bars in your work with Harmonics ?

 

Thanks and Welcome Aboard

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

My second question is whether the overbalance and underbalance concept in regard to symmetry as practiced by Robert Miner, Bryce Gilmore, etc, can be applied to Fib specific Harmonic patterns ?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

OAC,

 

From some of what I have done already I have seen almost truer patterns with volume bars. However I can't find the time relationship as well. I'm not sure if I need to adjust something or not. I do know that every day in forex there are times of action and reaction just like clock work which means traders using time charts and not so much volume charts.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
My second question is whether the overbalance and underbalance concept in regard to symmetry as practiced by Robert Miner, Bryce Gilmore, etc, can be applied to Fib specific Harmonic patterns ?

 

I hope Suri can comment on this as I have not studied anything by Robert Miner or Bryce Gilmore.

 

Suri your thoughts and experience?

 

Carl

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

You guys need to create a 'what are we talking about' thread so those of us that are completely baffled looking at your charts w/ lines everywhere can attempt to participate. Just an intro thread about 'harmonics' could be useful.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi Carl,

 

Thanks for your post.

 

I have been working with Harmonic Patterns about 8-10 years out of my 13+ years of trading. Pattern trading is my primary way of trading and in my view Harmonic Patterns are very efficient way and offer great risk/reward ratios to trade patterns with Time/Price confluence theories as you mentioned. My primary patterns are ABCs and X5 patterns (All 5-point patterns Gartley/Butterfly etc...)

 

These discussions could be very elaborate but few pioneers to mention are:

Gartley, Garrett Williams, Robert Miner, Scot Carney, Larry Pesavento, Bryce Gilmore etc.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

 

 

 

I've been working on research for several of the patterns and looking at other patterns. I've been looking at time and price completion trying to evaluate the standard accepted values to see if there are better ratios that are seen more often.

 

I hope to create a better indicator for identifying the patterns from all of this. I'm interested to hear your experiences.

 

Cheers,

Carl

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Just to chip in, here are some major factors which I have found with these patterns.

 

As OAC mentioned, there are overshoots and undershoots that dramatically affect the validity of these patterns. This is because of volatility in the market, or because of a larger picture trend shift going on. Multiple time frame analysis is extremely important.

 

It is critical that if you are aware of this potential and to be careful getting married to these "perfect storm" set-ups. The very very best set-ups I have seen, picture perfect, are routinely annihilated.

 

It is very important to have a solid discipline for entry and exit (almost mechanical) to accompany this type of trading. That way you are covered in case of overshoot, undershoot, and failure.

 

Good thread Carl, hope you are taking notes along the way.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I have just come to be talking with Scott Carney in his trading room. I have seen several of my ideas confirmed by what he has done.

 

I have done a lot in the past with elliott waves and the harmonics seem to be a much larger part of them then most know. Since seeing this I have come to see and believe that the harmonic patterns are much more predictive then EW's. Or at least give tighter SL and TP levels.

 

I hope to be talking with you more.

 

Cheers,

Carl

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Just to chip in, here are some major factors which I have found with these patterns.

 

As OAC mentioned, there are overshoots and undershoots that dramatically affect the validity of these patterns. This is because of volatility in the market, or because of a larger picture trend shift going on. Multiple time frame analysis is extremely important.

 

It is critical that if you are aware of this potential and to be careful getting married to these "perfect storm" set-ups. The very very best set-ups I have seen, picture perfect, are routinely annihilated.

 

It is very important to have a solid discipline for entry and exit (almost mechanical) to accompany this type of trading. That way you are covered in case of overshoot, undershoot, and failure.

 

Good thread Carl, hope you are taking notes along the way.

 

Thanks waveslider,

 

Yes I have noticed the "perfect storm" setups and agree with what I think is meant by the over/under shoot that you and brownsfan are mentioning. I am taking all of this into my research and applying almost "fuzzy" logic to it. In the end I actually hope to do that.

 

The overlying fact however is how accurate these patterns are. Yes there are larger things to consider with other TF's and rules vary with the use of a pattern in a lower TF when say an opposite pattern exists in a higher TF. The next phase of my research will look at and include this into the mix.

 

Cheers

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi OAC,

 

Thanks for your welcome!!

 

I trade Tick charts (eg: @ES 610T) and watch 5m and Daily Charts. But all my trading decisions are only made on 610T (SINGLE time-frame). And also I use similar range/box size RangeBars and Renko Charts in TS (use for confirmations of patterns etc.)

 

I have studied Volume and built Volume based Systems/theories in my past life but currently I do not use any volume concepts/theories for trading. Recent VSA theories looks interesting though...

 

Volume bars may have merit but I will stick to my Tick Bars (the Topic of my How to Select Chart-Time Frame Post...).

 

Given that, Patterns form/fail in all time-frames and in all market instruments. I do not know if any conventional (TICK, Volume or Time) bars have any advantage on other when detecting patterns. The theory may be different for Range/Renko/3PLB type of charts since each of the prices (O, H, L, C) are derived from actual traded O,H,L,C prices.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

 

 

 

 

Suri,

Tim Morge, the Median Line expert uses 10,000 volume bars for the S&P.

And our local expert, Steve46 uses 2400, 10,000 volume bars for his pattern recognitions.

Do you find any value in volume bars in your work with Harmonics ?

 

Thanks and Welcome Aboard

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi OAC,

 

Thanks for your post.

 

I have never picked up the concept Over/Under balance from Bryce Gilmore or Robert Miner's books. Perhaps I'll now..

 

Thanks for your tip.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

 

 

 

My second question is whether the overbalance and underbalance concept in regard to symmetry as practiced by Robert Miner, Bryce Gilmore, etc, can be applied to Fib specific Harmonic patterns ?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Hi OAC,

 

I have never picked up the concept Over/Under balance from Bryce Gilmore or Robert Miner's books. Perhaps I'll now..

 

Thanks for your tip.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

I have a lot more tips if you promise to keep them off your next book.;)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
OAC,

 

Hey the suspense is killing!!! ;)

 

So what are the tips? :confused:

 

Cheers,

Carl

 

I gave you a link, "trade what you see", much earlier in this thread. There is some very good stuff in there. But you brushed it off as being too ordinary,

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I gave you a link, "trade what you see", much earlier in this thread. There is some very good stuff in there. But you brushed it off as being too ordinary,

 

Sorry there OAC, you made the comment about a "special sauce" if you will. I asked about it and you give this kind of response. FYI I did goto your link and looked around and guess what? 99.99% of it is typical price action. OK that is fine as that is what I trade.

 

Was my question to your baited post a reason to be snotty about it? I thought maybe this forum would be a better place to work and trade through. I guess that still remains to be seen. :)

 

Cheers,

Carl

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi OAC,

 

Today I plotted X5 patterns using 10000 shares of @ES chart.

Here is the pic.. I'll watch next week or so and let you know if

they have an advantage.

 

Regards,

Suri

 

 

Suri,

Tim Morge, the Median Line expert uses 10,000 volume bars for the S&P.

And our local expert, Steve46 uses 2400, 10,000 volume bars for his pattern recognitions.

Do you find any value in volume bars in your work with Harmonics ?

 

Thanks and Welcome Aboard

X5_Sep1708.gif.ca547946f7440cfbbe0523c6b5604bfe.gif

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Here is the same X5 pattern chart on 610 Tick of @ES.

The price-swing ratios are pretty identical (should be) but

the number of bars may be different.

 

In Tradestation's RadarScreen, I cannot compute my

BarInfo analysis (Num. of Bars, Avg. Bar Range) for

a Volume Chart (no options provided in RS).

 

I'll watch in real-time next few days

and see if 610T chart and 10000 shares

chart produce the same X5 patterns, then I may stay

with my 610T Chart.

 

Here is a similar box-range Renko chart showing

X5 pattern structures.

 

Regards,

Suri

X5_610T.gif.e3c2af13f78cca3f262b09478e1b53fa.gif

Renko_1.gif.26269fbdf630e1fb9864421f5f4d9090.gif

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Check out this post I made back in 1-21-2008: http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/2/recession-exposure-3230-2.html

It is interesting looking back on it now.

I was trying to identify Harmonic pattern and price and time symmetry in the Dow. And I was probably the first person on this forum who mentioned the two unfamiliar words back then: "Derivative Meltdown". It is a little scary to have something that was somewhat theoretical to become a full-blown reality in a matter of a few month.

On the other hand, none of this matters as a trader/scalper that I am now. Every day, every hour and every second, I have or try to have no opinions. Zilch. Nada. I enjoy my soundful sleep every night and even take occasional naps during the day. :o

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Similar Content

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Originally Answered: How can I compete with people who are better than me in every way?   So you want to outcompete people who are smarter, better looking and more experienced than you?   No problem!   All you have to do is outwork them.   Will Smith said, "if we both get on a treadmill either you're going to get off first or I'm going to die trying."     Most people just aren't willing to work that hard. Sure, they'll show up for the job interview and maybe practice in front of the mirror for a few minutes, but they won't do hours and hours of research and prepare for weeks. They won't wake up early and stay up late working on their dreams.   So while all those smart, good-looking, experienced people are waiting around for the next opportunity to come their way, you can outwork them and create your own opportunities.   In a few years, you'll be that "smart" person everyone looks up to. But you'll be different. You'll know it was your hard work, your inner strength and your commitment to living a great life that made you successful and brilliant - not luck or good genes.” – Tom Corson-Knowles, Quora Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/   
    • @sxiqxx, Well done on making your first post a promising strategy. @everyone, post up if you want this coded into an EA. Although I switched to TradeStation, I still have an active MT5 demo with MetaEditor. I can code it without referencing object oriented programming which should be retroactively compatible with MT4. Let me know...
    • Please allow me to retort (in jest): RESPONSE 1 : Get a job supervising others where you're in control of performance reports and ride those others 100%. This makes your performance 100% with little to no effort.   RESPONSE 2: Feel free to piss off your boss but stay nonviolent. When the side effects of his viagra and testosterone boosters cause him to physically assault you, you have the legal upper hand. This can result in a boatload of trading capital.   RESPONSE 3: Feel free to have intimate relations with your boss if she finds you attractive. Rest assured that mum's the word because once again, you have the legal upper hand. This can also result in a boatload of trading capital.   RESPONSE 4: Don't be fake friends with any enemies... unless you need information from them. Being fake friends with everyone will cause you to become an empty shell of a person with no direction in life.   REPONSE 5: Get your boss to become reliant on your performance (really, just the performance of your subordinates), and then plan an "overheard" conversation wherein you fake an interview with another potential employer. You'll probably get a pay increase or a promotion.   RESPONSE 6: If you can give your 75% percent to a project, give 50% and rely on your legal upper hand(s). Learn to write trading algo's during your other 50%.   RESPONSE 7: Take all of the office boys out to nightclub where you merely sip soft drinks on a weeknight. Upon your return to the office in the morning, inform the security guards that all of the office boys are intoxicated. Your boss will love you for it.   RESPONSE 8: Never try to prove your client wrong or find faults in their processes, but do secretly collect their information in case you jump ship or "someone you know" decides to start his own company.   RESPONSE 9: Never stay in a firm for too long. Instead, use your ill-gotten capital to exit the rat-race and start trading.   RESPONSE 10: Trading pays more than your career. Interpersonal skills are now irrelevant. Use your technical skills for trading. Never stop learning and keep updating your technical skills.😁
    • There are a lot of trading strategies like elliot waves, wyckoff etc so we need to apply those who best suited to our need and are understandable too.
    • Scalping can be good during the high volatile markets however the new traders should be careful while entering and exiting the markets too quickly since they can make losses as well. If the broker support news trading we can make most out of the scalping in my opinion.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.