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Boingomatic- 8/14/23


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What else can you say? Uh, this looks like a bottom? 

The ES, 24 hour S&P futures needs to take out 4486 to confirm. Failing that, it would need to be below 4464 by the end of regular trading to suggest a possibility of extended decline.  The Calm Before the Storm

111u4b

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Doc,

a question regarding the "Weekly Chart Picks":

Have you ever done an investigation about in which "environment" the hit-to-miss ratio is best? My guess would be that around earnings release the ratio is worse than in calmer periods. Since charts of individual stocks get "fucked up" by earnings release due to gaps (think about MA's in particular). Maybe results overall could be improved somewhat if periods of higher volatility (around earnings release date) could be filtered out? For example. If you get a buy signal, but earnings release date is in 2 days, you don't take the signal.

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1 hour ago, fxfox said:

Doc,

a question regarding the "Weekly Chart Picks":

Have you ever done an investigation about in which "environment" the hit-to-miss ratio is best? My guess would be that around earnings release the ratio is worse than in calmer periods. Since charts of individual stocks get "fucked up" by earnings release due to gaps (think about MA's in particular). Maybe results overall could be improved somewhat if periods of higher volatility (around earnings release date) could be filtered out? For example. If you get a buy signal, but earnings release date is in 2 days, you don't take the signal.

They work best at 6 month cycle turning points. In between, less so. This is the principle of synchronicity at work. 

As I've pointed out often, rangebound markets are meatgrinders. The system is designed to find swings, not trade range edges. I try to avoid making commitments when the trend is flat. But sometimes you just don't know. The market is constantly changing. There's a lot of randomness that you just have to accept and pull the plug when the trade goes bad. Perhaps more importantly, we must be active in taking advantage of when there are breakouts from the range. 

Earnings have no impact in cyclical analysis. If there's a buy signal after a strong earnings report and the chart is coming out of a good base, I feel comfortable putting it on the list. Doesn't work so well on the sell side in a bull market.  

Positive earnings surprises in the direction of the trade more than compensate for the ones that go wrong if the loss is managed properly. For example, I recently had a buy on Airbnb and the next day it had a vicious selloff on earnings, dropping about 10%. In the next update, I set a stop just below key support. At that point everyone hated it but the longer term chart structure looked good. It made a double bottom while I waited, but then it took off and became one of the best performers this year.

When it began to show signs of being maxed out, and the holding period was approaching 13 weeks, I added a tight trailing stop which closed out the trade shortly after with a 19% gain. 

If you spend time trying to guess what earnings will be and what impact they will have, you will never take risk and never trade. I'll leave the fundamentals to investors, and stick to technical trading with the certain knowledge that that will provide enough of an edge for the method that I use to be modestly profitable over the long haul. 

There are no perfect trades.  Just some are more lucky than others. And some less so. So I'm not seeking perfection in running this list. I'm just trying to tilt the odds so that I have more good luck than bad. When I have bad luck, the object is to keep going because of the knowledge that the odds are that you'll have good luck on the next one. If you're 2-1 lucky to unlucky, and you manage the unlucky ones intelligently, you can take it to the bank. 

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