cover

CONTENTS

Cover

Half Title

Series Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Preface

PART ONE: TIME FRAME CONCEPTS

Chapter 1: A Three-Frame Day

The 1st Frame

The Midday Frame

The Last Hour Time Frame

Summary

Notes

Chapter 2: Opening Range Bar

ORB Defined

3-Bar ORB

ORB Pennant

ORB Matched Highs/Lows

Summary

Notes

Chapter 3: Pivot/Exhaustion Grid

ORB Kilroy

Break-Away Pivots: The Pivot Ledge1

The Break-Away Lap

Previous Highs and Lows

Previous Closing Prices: The Gap

Tick Bar Laps

Dynamic Exhaustion Levels: The EMAs

Floor Trader's Pivot Points

Fibonacci Targets

Measured Move Targets

Market Profile

Trend Lines

Summary

Notes

Chapter 4: Dough Bar to Die Bar

Summary

Chapter 5: Leadership Divergence

Summary

Chapter 6: The Work-Done Concept

Summary

Chapter 7: Trading the News

Summary

Note

PART TWO: DAY MODEL PATTERNS

Chapter 8: Persistent Trend Day

Persistence in Trend: It's a Thing

ORB Entries

Telltale Leadership

Leadership Shift

Flubber Bounce/Monkey Bars

Last Chance Texaco: The 200EMA Entry

Summary

Notes

Chapter 9: Test-and-Reject Day

Summary

Notes

Chapter 10: The Split-Open Day

Summary

Note

Chapter 11: Day Model Sequence Cycle

Summary

Notes

PART THREE: REPETITIVE CHART PATTERNS

Chapter 12: The Momentum Grid

Summary

Notes

Chapter 13: Pre-Breakout Pause Pattern

Summary

Chapter 14: The Classics Revisited

M-Tops, W-Bottoms

Telltale Triangles

Head-and-Shoulders Reversals, Revised

The Rising/Declining Wedge

Midday Channel

Summary

Note

Chapter 15: MA Pattern Concepts

The EMA Pinch

Gap-Close . . . or Further?

The EMA Cup

The Cup as Breakout Trigger

Summary

PART FOUR: CONFLUENCE AND EXECUTION

Chapter 16: Transition Time Reversals

Summary

Chapter 17: Trade Entry Models

Summary

Chapter 18: The Trade Plan

Prescript

Blueprint

My Blueprint Notes

Summary

Appendix A: Companion Website

Appendix B: Color Legend

Appendix C: Serial Sequent Wave Method

Appendix D: ValhallaFutures Indicator Package and Intraday Index Futures Trading Course

Appendix E: Screen Capturing an Event Library

Appendix F: Randolph Newman

Appendix G: Fibonacci versus Pivot/Exhaustion Grid

Appendix H: The Last Triangle

Bibliography

About the Author

Index

PIVOTS,
PATTERNS,
AND
INTRADAY
SWING TRADES

 

 

 

Founded in 1807, John Wiley & Sons is the oldest independent publishing company in the United States. With offices in North America, Europe, Australia and Asia, Wiley is globally committed to developing and marketing print and electronic products and services for our customers' professional and personal knowledge and understanding.

The Wiley Trading series features books by traders who have survived the market's ever changing temperament and have prospered—some by reinventing systems, others by getting back to basics. Whether a novice trader, professional or somewhere in-between, these books can provide the advice and strategies needed to prosper today and well into the future.

For more on this series, visit our website at www.WileyTrading.com.

                

PIVOTS,
PATTERNS,
AND
INTRADAY
SWING TRADES

 

Derivatives Analysis with the E-mini
and Russell Futures Contracts

 

M. William Scheier
ValhallaFutures.com

 

 

 

 

2013038867





Dedicated to the memory of Randolph Newman,
and to his wonderful granddaughter Glenny,
who saw in me something of merit
when I was a young man.

PREFACE

My initial efforts in trading were focused almost exclusively on what is known as position trading, using equities and the physical commodity futures. Stretched out over the days and weeks a position could last, a trend in that time frame would eventually begin to make sense in technical terms, unfolding gradually as it proceeded on. There was a pace to the decision process. As a trader, one could mull over the conflicting elements of the technical picture. Some aspects would recede into the background and render themselves less relevant; some would grow in their importance and become glaring.

Initial forays into day trading stock index futures reveal a starkly different decision environment. There is no time to dwell on technical conditions. A day trade opportunity does not take shape over days and weeks. Opposing technical signals don't recede in time enough to sweep away the cross current of doubts before a decision is required. By the time a trend finally makes sense, it is often about to end. Intraday volatility in the stock indices is far more exaggerated than the daily bar charts of other markets, partly due to the extreme leverage, partly due to the intense participation. And positioning techniques that survive in the action of the long-term trends in other instruments get slaughtered in the countertrend reactions of the highly leveraged S&P 500 futures contract within the short term.

When starting out, understanding the day as it unfolded on a day trading scale was akin to trying to read a foreign language or decipher a secret code. Somehow the tremendous opportunities in these intraday trend swings were surely being captured successfully, but by whom?

The less-experienced student will often assume that floor traders in the pit capture the intraday swings. After all, those guys must be in the know. Their access is so immediate. They literally create price. That being out there—hanging 10 on the leading edge to the rhythm of history—must provide a better view, and information not otherwise available to the rest of us must be streaming across the pit at critical moments, providing the insight to decipher the head fakes from the real trend swings. One could easily come to the conclusion that because these guys are the professionals, they must surely make up that slim minority who are consistently taking the profits from those less skilled working off-floor on their video screens.

But nothing could be further from the truth. Floor traders are, for the most part, scalpers. They tend to front-run or fade the order flow. To them, swing trading intraday trends would be position trading. I was also surprised to learn that the majority of floor traders see the world from the point of view of Efficient Market Theorists, admittedly or not. For floor traders, if paper flow into the pit is the current of energy driving the markets, then it is the news and news events that provide the power supply for that energy. Why should they believe otherwise, given their worldview!

Nor is the S&P pit in Chicago the bastion of capitalism and free trade one might think it to be. The number of Efficient Market Practitioners on the floor of the futures exchange is only surpassed by the number of pit traders whose politics reveal an inclination toward unionism, trade regulation, intervention, and controls. Remarks from otherwise very talented traders actually reveal the belief that it was one U.S. President's tenure or another that caused a difficult period of market activity or a particularly beneficial one. With thinking like that underlying the operations of the S&P pit, how much insight is to be garnered there for a conceptual understanding of market trend structure? The theory of Random Walk never had more adamant proponents.

A useful propensity toward trend analysis was already working for me when I approached day trading—that of pattern recognition. What was needed to crack the code of intraday trend disguise was to see the process of pattern recognition in broader terms than just visual price formation. What was needed was an expanded understanding of pattern recognition to include other concepts in market behavior, concepts of technical event minutia, including time of day and relative price position, especially those happening in tandem. From such concepts, models were derived, and with models, the activity of an otherwise indecipherable and random-looking day could be matched to one or more of a limited number of codified categories, each replete with its own setups.

The application of this broader definition of pattern recognition is particularly well adapted to the shorter time frames, where the decision environment requires quick response. When Adrian De Groot, a psychologist working in the 1960s, studied the differences between chess players, he discovered that the grandmasters recognized familiar configurations and visual patterns to assess game progress and decipher board strategy; they did not rely on mathematics, statistics, or remarkable memory skills. How else could a single player manage to play dozens of games simultaneously, going from board to board with near immediate response!

The focus of this book is day trading in the shorter time frames of the stock index futures contracts, with techniques that are anything but mechanical scalping. With conceptual event models and their accompanying rules, the intent is to convey a set of tools by which the major intraday swing trends can be identified quickly, and often at the very turning points where they begin.

The voice of the text is directed at the trading community in general, with an intentional clarity for each explanation aimed at the beginner stock index futures trader in particular. The term Trader has been capitalized in many places as a reference to the profile of a specific role model intended for emulation by any man or woman who understands that the process of development is ever one of student to market, and not one of retail to ­professional.

PART ONE

TIME FRAME
CONCEPTS


“Everybody” is always wrong. If everyone was right and no one was wrong, “everybody” would be rich and nobody would be poor. “Everybody” is always wrong.

—Randolph Newman1


Even the scholar most in repute knows only what is reputed and holds fast to just that.

—Heraclitus

CHAPTER 1

A Three-Frame Day

For the longest time as a commodities position trader, I was confused by day trading, especially day trading the S&P 500 futures contract. The lengthy trading period of nearly seven hours was itself an impediment to understanding the price action. The day's trading behavior patterns and events often seemed strung together at random, encouraging the deceptive practice of attributing trend direction to unfolding news events. There was no making any technical sense of it from one hour to the next. But it cleared up almost immediately when I began to view the day as divided into three separate and distinct trading sessions: the 1st Frame, the Midday Frame, and the 3rd or Last Hour Time Frame.

These are just names. In truth, the periods don't last for exactly the same time each day. The 1st Frame of the day can last about 1 hour and 45 minutes, give or take about 20 minutes. The Midday Frame can last anywhere from about three to about three-and-a-half hours. And the Last Hour Time Frame gets whatever is left over, occasionally not distinguishing itself at all. Although traders often refer to this third period as the “last hour,” I have found it to begin earlier and extend longer than the last hour of the trading day.

To be of any practical use, however, these time periods should be treated as fixed. In that way, a rule-based approach can serve to compare daily action in the transition windows from one period to the next. Each of these three main periods of the trading day does, in fact, have a flavor and unique character all its own. Because price action actually changes in character from one period to the next, and does so fairly consistently, different methods to trade these different behavior periods serve better than a one-size-fits-all plan. Rules can be devised based on the differences between these time sessions, and thus can help reduce one's temptation to introduce into trade entry decisions the intuition that rules of a trade plan are designed to eliminate. So for purposes of establishing a time reminder, and a trigger to implement a different phase of a trading plan, the 1st Frame of the day for the equity indices starts from the cash opening of the New York Stock Exchange at 9:30 A.m. and lasts until 11:15 A.M. ET. The Midday Frame picks up at that point and extends to 2:30 P.M. And, thereafter, the Last Hour Time Frame of the day starts at 2:30 P.M. and extends until the futures close at 4:15 P.M. ET, 15 minutes past the NYSE cash equity close.

An important thing not to confuse about these three time periods is the association with trend. Going from one time period to another does not necessarily mean a change of trend, although it can. Instead, it is better to understand the transition from frame to frame in terms of resolution, momentum, price action, and complexity of pattern.

Often, one time period can be said to be a resolution to the one preceding it. The 1st Frame of the day is usually the more volatile, and thus the Midday Frame tends to consolidate what was accomplished in the earlier going. If, instead, the 1st Frame is corrective and overlapping in pattern, more like a consolidation pattern, it usually resolves itself early in the Midday Frame by a sharp breakout into trend. However, when analyzing the relationship between the first two frames, the latter pattern occurs less often. The 1st Frame is usually the more volatile and trending, and the Midday Frame tends more to consolidate or even just chop around. If the Midday Frame builds a consolidation pattern, it will usually resolve itself in transition to the Last Hour Time Frame, beginning around 2:30 P.M. ET. If the trend in one period is destined to continue into the next, it will often accelerate in transition. If a trend had already accelerated within one time period, the next period may see a slowdown and even become choppy. Reversals can come in the middle of any period, but the momentum and the direction of such a reversal is more likely to change around 11:15 A.M. or 2:30 P.M. Short-term reversals are especially common at 10:30 A.M. and 12 P.M., and are thus also worthy to be included as designated Time Markers, but the transition of momentum and price action is better represented at the specific Time Markers of 11:15 P.M. and 2:30 P.M. ET.

Marking at least these two Transition Times on your own charts every day is a great exercise. Watch how often the market action seems to call for either a trade exit or entry as they approach. (See Figures 1.1 and 1.2.)

Figure 1.1 Transition Times

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Figure 1.2 Transition Times

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(For colorized versions of these charts, go to the Wiley companion website for this book, with instructions in Appendix A).

To be an effective trader, plotting such lines of time frame demarcation must become more than an exercise of mere curiosity. It must become habitual. And speaking from a lot of experience, traders can become lazy and complacent. Besides, in the heat of a trade entry or exit decision, many other emotional factors can take precedence over something a trader may or may not remember to check. Therefore, an indicator that automatically plots vertical lines on the screen at these critical junctures should be a standard tool in a trader's software package.2

The 1st Frame

While stock investors and position traders often consider the closing price of each day to be the most important for assessing performance, day traders consider the opening price as the most critical, as Grant Noble has noted in his book, The Trader's Edge.3 Everything that happens for the entire day in the futures market—and especially price reaction throughout the first hour—is influenced by that opening. Volume and volatility are usually strongest in this first time period.

Pent-up orders from traders and institutions alike arrive at the floor most heavily at the opening bell, 9:30 A.M. ET. Attendance in the S&P and Nasdaq trading pits on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange is always greatest during this period. So important is the 1st Frame time period that many of these same floor traders consider the day over when the first hour and a half or so comes to an end.

For beginning traders, the opening hour presents some special challenges. Price volatility can be extreme, sometimes in a whipsaw manner. This volatility can frustrate the placement of stop-loss orders, as the market seems almost determined to take them out. Then again, on many a morning, price action seems truncated, sometimes on the very days when so much direction would have otherwise been expected.

That is why many novice traders get chopped up in the early going, and are warned to avoid trading in the first hour. Without a specific trading methodology that takes into account where the day's pivots and reversals are most likely to take place, a trader hoping to initiate a position for the early trend is not likely to survive his first stop-loss order.

Think about what was said earlier in this section regarding the S&P trading pit attendance. Some floor traders are done for the day after the 1st Frame is over. That means they've managed to accomplish their trading goals without a care as to where the market ends up for the day. When it opens again tomorrow, they'll have the same opportunity they had today. The price levels will be different, and they'll have a different set of numbers to work with, but for them, with their short-term worldview, the opportunity will be just the same.

If you come from investing in stocks, or even commodity position trading with holding periods of several days, weeks, or even months, the thought of viewing the first hour as almost an entire session unto itself is almost jarring. But if you want to be successful trading the stock index contracts, the 1st Frame should be understood exactly that way.

Think of the market hour that comes just previous to the beginning of the Midday Frame as one of testing. Only on rare occasions does the market know exactly where it is going from the very beginning. Think of this period as vying for dominance of trend direction between two warring factions.

Some of the largest players, like funds, have been compelled to commit dollars for various reasons; some have been forced to withdraw them. Some are reacting to the events of the previous day or fresh news; some are anticipating those of the day to follow. But by the end of the 1st Frame session, the result of this exchange has left the market in a position to commit to direction. By this hour's end, on a great majority of days, as was the case in Figure 1.3, one end of the entire day's trading range has already been established.

Figure 1.3 Midday Frame Transition

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The Midday Frame

The Midday Frame starts at 11:15 A.M. ET, as the morning rush to commit funds begins to subside. Many seasoned floor traders who have been actively trading the morning's volatile swings are ready to leave for a break not long after this period begins. Some are even leaving for the day. If the market action has been volatile up to this time, action often now begins to be choppy, and that means entry signals and techniques can get sloppy for the trader who has waited till now to take a position.

It's as if the price action of the 1st Frame has left a kind of watermark on the page, a footprint pointing in the sand, a pencil rubbing of the struggle just beneath the surface. The task for the Trader in this period of transition is to recognize that the first of the day's major battles is probably over, and even if the current trend is not over, to consider taking no fresh trades while this transition period takes hold. A new trend or even a major reversal may be at hand, but at the very minimum, it's time to take a fresh appraisal of the situation.

After that, as shown in Figure 1.4, a trend has completed. The pace begins to slow down, and price patterns become more complex. The Midday Frame has then begun to develop. Breakouts usually begin to lose their energy and often fizzle. What might have been a simple 3-bar pause pattern in the 1st Frame now shows up as a 10-bar Elliott abc pattern. Where price can—and often does—pivot on a single bar in the first hour, it is apt to form more complex, even classical chart reversal patterns later in the day. This is the time when the market usually begins to consolidate, and trade strategies that don't account for this potential change of pace and pattern are usually doomed to failure.

Figure 1.4 Midday Frame Transition

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A beginner trader often finds the opportunity of the first hour irresistible, but the pace so furious that it's already over before he even has a sense of the trend that finally takes place. So, he waits until things slow down in the Midday Frame. Too often, the less experienced trader comes into the market at that point intending to capture in the Midday Frame what he missed in the 1st Frame's trend. This is usually disastrous. The character of the action following the Midday Frame transition begins to settle down. The position he takes in the Midday Frame with the 1st Frame's action in mind proves mismatched to the change of pace and market behavior that has begun to occur as the Midday Frame takes over.

The Midday Frame is usually a new ball game altogether. You can't capture what was missed in the 1st Frame with trades taken in the Midday Frame. The 1st Frame period is over. The Midday Frame models are different. Strategies for the Midday Frame must take into consideration a change of pace and an added complexity to the setups. Since each period stands on its own merits, each period must be traded by its own models and corresponding rules.

Although this change in volatility is fairly consistent, nothing is without its exceptions. This one, however, is consistent enough that its absence becomes an important signal of its own. Section Two, about Day Model Patterns, covers trend signals that can occur by just observing the character of transition from the 1st Frame to the Midday Frame.

The Last Hour Time Frame

The 3rd period, or Last Hour Time Frame, begins at 2:30 P.M. and lasts until the futures markets close at 4:15 P.M. ET, 15 minutes after the close of the New York Stock Exchange cash market. By 2:30 P.M., many traders who were away for the Midday Frame have returned to the floor. The corrective patterns that defined the Midday Frame have now possibly consolidated into an identifying whole.

It is here that many a day's trend either reasserts the direction of the morning, or is slaughtered by a reversal of the day's early action. The beginning of this time period is usually the resolution to the consolidation or coiling of the previous frame. So consistent is the change of action between the Midday Frame and the Last Hour Time Frame that this Time Marker warrants a name of its own: the 2:30 Transition Time.

When fast-breaking action again ensues, patterns that took 30 minutes to set up in the Midday Frame now barely take five or six in Last Hour action. And if this period sounds like it might be the easiest to act on—following the methodical setup of a familiar Midday breakout pattern—the trader should keep one thing in mind. The outcome of any given day's Last Hour Time Frame is often the biggest surprise to the majority of traders. Note the chart in Figure 1.5 continues the day shown in Figure 1.3.

Figure 1.5 Last Hour Transition

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If, on the other hand, it was the Midday Frame that did the trending instead of the more usual consolidation, then the yin yang flips again and the 2:30 Transition Time can bring an end to the Midday Frame trend and serve to consolidate or reverse.

Notice how the chart in Figure 1.6 is a continuation of the day in Figure 1.4.

Figure 1.6 2:30 P.M. Transition Time

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Summary

Dividing the day into separate time frames or sessions would seem arbitrary and without authority. No bells are rung, nor are any exchange notifications published at the above-designated times. But the experience of daily observation teaches that there are definitely transitions of price behavior at certain times day after day. The novice trader wants an explanation for these phenomena: end of the bond market, end of the energy markets, muscle memory from the occasional Federal Reserve interest rate announcements, and so forth. The novice trader wants logic. But the market is not driven by logic. None of these proposed reasons really fit. The experienced Trader doesn't care. He is only interested in market behavior that repeats itself with enough regularity to give him an edge to his trading. Leave the logic for the Analyst. Be the Trader.

Notes

1. Among the stages in his lifetime career as a trader, Randy was a floor broker at the New Orleans Cotton Exchange and, in his final years, my mentor while I was but a young man. For a more complete biography of Randolph Newman, see Appendix F.

2. There are so many charting software packages in use among the huge pool of traders worldwide that it's impractical to offer code for such indicators within this book. However, the code for automatic vertical plots of these two frame Transition Times, as well as auto-plot lines for the 10:30 A.M. and 12 P.M. times, is available as a Time Marker indicator in the ValhallaFutures Indicator Package, valhallafutures.com.

3. Grant Noble, The Trader's Edge (Chicago, IL: Probus Publishing, McGraw-Hill, 1994).