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92 Tools, Methods and Helpful Hints to
Help You Succeed at Futures Trading
Here is a
sample chapter of 
"Trading Smart:"
Eight Short-term
Technical Tools
that can Make You Money
There
are several valuable technical trading tools that I use on a shorter-term and
even an intra-day basis. While I am not a "day trader" and am more of an
intermediate-term "position trader," I do have many readers that are day traders
or trade shorter timeframes. Thus, I like to provide analysis and clues that do
help out those traders who use shorter trading timeframes. And even for the
longer-term position traders, shorter-term trading tools can help refine their
all-important entry and exit strategies. Below are some of my favorite
shorter-term chart signals that I employ.
(You'll note that my favorite shorter-term
trading signals are not computer-generated, in keeping with my philosophy that
while computers certainly aid traders in many ways, they can never replace the
extreme value of the human eye examining a price chart.)
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Collapse in volatility:
A collapse in market price volatility occurs
when trading ranges (price bars) narrow substantially. This price pattern is
evidenced by price chart bars (the bars can be daily, hourly or in minutes) that
suddenly get smaller. The smaller price bars should number at least three in a
row, and do not necessarily need to get progressively smaller with each bar.
This "collapse in volatility" usually sets off a significantly bigger price
move--either up or down. As the smaller price bars accrue on the chart, there is
no set number of bars that will set off the bigger price move. It could be three
bars, or it could be 10 bars or more before the bigger price action is set off.
Outside days (or
bars):

Outside days (or bars) occur when the last
price bar is bigger (a bigger trading range) than the previous bar on the chart.
If the close (or last trade of the bar's timeframe) is higher than the previous
bar's last trade, then that is considered a bullish "outside day" (or bar) up. A
bearish "outside day" (or bar) down occurs when the close (or last trade of the
bar's timeframe) is lower than the previous bar's close, or last trade.
Inside days:
These occur when the last price bar is "inside"
the previous bar--meaning the trading range is smaller and inside the previous
bar's trading range. In other words, the last bar's high is lower and the low is
higher than the previous bar's trading range. Inside days (or bars) signal that
the market is taking a break after a busy period. Inside days can also be an
indicator that a collapse in volatility may be setting up and that yet another
bigger price move could be on the horizon. After a big price bar and busy
trading day, one can expect the next session could be an "inside" rest day.
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Key reversals:
These are more important chart signals that
occur less frequently than most others I discuss in this feature. Key reversals
are one important signal of a potential market top or bottom. A key reversal
occurs when a new for-the-move high or
low occurs, and then during that same day (or trading bar), the price
sharply reverses
direction to form an
"outside day" up or down. Some analysts will call this, alone, a key reversal.
But in my trading rules, a key reversal must be confirmed by follow-through
strength or weakness the next trading session (or trading bar). Follow-through
greatly helps eliminate false signals and makes a market "prove itself" after a
bigger move.
Exhaustion tails:
These
occur when either buying or selling apparently is exhausted after prices make a
fresh-for-the-move high or low that creates a bigger price bar on the chart.
Then prices reverse course to close at the other extreme of the bar's earlier
move. Thus, you get the bigger bar that creates a "tail." These tails are then
important guideposts because they then become an important resistance or support
level on the chart.
Closing Price:
Most traders agree that the most important price of the
trading session is not the open, the high or the low--but it is the closing
price, or settlement. After an entire session of buyers and sellers doing
business, this is the level at which they have agreed (voluntarily or
involuntarily) on price. I place more emphasis on a closing price below an
important support level or above an important resistance level, or above or
below a trend line or chart pattern--as opposed prices just probing above or
below those levels during the session only to then pull back.
Daily or weekly high or low closes:
If a market closes near the session high or at the weekly
high close, that's a sign of market strength and suggests there will be at least
some follow-through strength the next trading session (or price bar). On a close
near the daily low or a weekly low close, this suggests market weakness and that
follow-through selling could occur the next trading session or price bar.
Gaps:
These chart formations occur when price bars
push well above or below the previous bar to form a gap on the chart. (The last
bar's low is higher than the previous bar's high for a gap-higher move. The last
bar's high is lower than the previous bar's low to form a gap-lower trade.) Gaps
can be created on a minute, hourly, daily, weekly or monthly chart. Price gaps
indicate a strong market move and many times the gaps will then serve as
important support or resistance levels on the chart.
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