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dear friends,
ps consolidation breakout exploration code is one of the best explortion in metastock to find the stocks which are ready to break out after consolidation.
can anyone please provide the code as my exploration is showing some errors
this will be great help to me
thanks in advance
shekarjoga@xxxxxxxxx
metastkuser <andysmith_999@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
OK, I've read the articles. Excellent, but boy is this guy longwinded... and constantly plugging TradeStation/EasyLanguage. I'm noticing a common trend here. The (self-proclaimed) successful traders have a lot of time on their hands.
Anyway, here's the summary in case you are lazy (since every second poster on this board seems to get a kick out of calling everyone else lazy -- go figure). I'm doing this from memory so spare me the hate mail:
-- Intro and Lesson 1: You can't predict markets, don't try. Rely on a system (he calls it strategy). Use TradeStation. Be rigorous with your system/strategy, backtest, quantify, characterize, know it like you know your mother. Use TradeStation. No room for ego, losses happen, move on, it's a business, enjoy it or get out of trading. Did I tell you about TradeStation?
--
Lession 2: take the secondary entry (Super, did you write this?). Four steps: dumb trader -> technical trader -> strategy trader -> guru. Seminars suck. Don't use Advanced GET. Deterministic approach to risk and capital management, know your probabilities. Use TradeStation. Create, test, trust and dispassionately use a system. Hey guess what? TradeStation. Cash management is the key. Learn to hedge.
-- Lesson 3: Three market types; trending, sideways with low volatility, and sideways with high volatility. Each market has its own trading strategies -- trend-following (15% of the time), low-V sideways (like stochs), and high-V sideways (editorial: switch to selling option premium). TradeStation strategies galore. Your system should suit... you!
Lesson 4: Separate the setup (flashing green or red arrow hopefully accompanied by a loud beep) from the actual trade entry. A good entry should catch every
possible move. Use stop orders not limit orders to enter. TradeStation Beep.
Lesson 5 & 6: Trade the market (trend or sideways) that suits your psyche. Trend markets/strategies have long periods of drawdown. Sideways has you sitting out much of the time. Quit your day job and trade full time to make the most profit. Stop-losses should not take you out more than 10% of the time, otherwise it's too tight.
Lesson 7: Use optimization to make a good strategy better, not to fix a bad one. A strategy is over-optimized when it fails to do the very thing it was created to do. Backtest over many different periods/bars to ensure there is no curve fitting.
Lesson 8: You strategy is kaput when you look at your brokerage statement and the drawdown is higher than it has ever been.
Lesson 9: Being a full time trader gets lonely, rehash of Intro. Use TradeStation. No barriers to entry, so a lot of losers get into this
business. Most traders quit because they ran out of money before the profits came in.
Editorial: The author contradicts himself at times. He says that it is useless trying to predict the direction of the market, yet that is what most systems do. If you really want to have your trading be independent of market direction, the only viable approach is to sell premium with fully hedged option positions (zero position delta).
--- In equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, superfragalist <no_reply@xxxx> wrote: > > For those of you who can't read my posts because of my caustic wit > and dry sense of humor, not to mention insulting all groups > simultaneously, here is a step by step guide to building your own > trading system. (I am removing the pearls from the pig pen so that > more people may enjoy them as jewelry! However, there is an art to > simultaneously insulting so many
with so few words. I do not intend > to bury that skill.) > > Let's us begin....... > > Read all the articles under Trading as a Business > > http://www.elitetrader.com/tr/index.cfm?s=17 > > The articles will teach you step by step how to build a trading > system. > > John Clayburg's book Four Steps to Trading Success will show you how > to setup a simple indicator system that is among the best there is. > It will serve as your basic trading system. It works on all stocks, > in any time frame and has no curve fit. Then you add your favorite > filters to it. > > In Roy's newsletter he is building one of the best filtering systems > there is. It's a great newsletter for teaching MS coding and systems > building. It's only $99 a year. > > www.metastocktips.co.nz >
> That should be most of what you need to get started and keep you from > getting too far off course. Oh, I would also add a 20 bar SMA to the > chart because price often regresses to the 20 bar SMA. > > If you absolutely feel the need to have red and green arrows that > scream buy me now, you can use a program like ICE, or the simple > systems from Performance Systems Plus. Just remember, any "expert" > system is going to generate a lot of false signals, so your other > basic buy sell indicators like the Clayburg's and Roy's filtering > technique Rule. (Especially Roy's noise filter. I would have paid > more than $100 for that alone.) > > Once you have done this, you will find the system you have built will > match the recommendations in the article, and there really isn't > anything any better out there for you to start with. You can trade > with it without
losing your rear. > > Oh, I almost forgot. Does it come with an exploration. No, it > doesn't. But that's not a factor. > > You really should trade from a fixed group of stocks in my humble > opinion. VERY few people have found success searching 7000 stocks a > night for the one's that have the little green or red arrows popping > up. It's better to use a pre-screened group such as the S&P Platinum > Portfolio or the Valueline T1 stocks or the IBD 100. > > If you don't want to use those, then scan by HAND every night a set > group like the S&P 100 or 500. You really do need to look at all > those charts by hand because you need to see where in the cycle each > stock is and what it's chart looks like. Nothing beats learning to > read charts, and exploring every night just won't teach you how to do > that. If you insist on having stocks that meet a
certain criteria, > learn to use Marketscreen.com. Yes, my brothers and sisters, you have > to pay for it but it's a much better exploration system than you'll > ever get with TA in a box like MS, and it's already programmed for > you. > > You also need to learn to use secondary entries because a stock that > is already trending has a better probability of continuing to move up > than a stock that has it's little red or green arrow showing. And > please remember---resist the urge to trade against the overall market > trend. The trend is your friend! > > What does a secondary entry mean? Well, if you open a chart and the > Clayburg are passed their intial buy signal and the stock is showing > a trend with Roy's filter, if you buy it even though it's passed it's > intial entry point, you stand a very good chance of making money. > When the Clayburg's
and Roy's filter tell you to sell it, you follow > those indications no matter what your intuition tells you, or what > the little green and red arrows are doing. > > Okay, those are my small contributions for those of you who wish to > have a trading system but don't know how to create one. You are > probably still grasping at straws, which you won't have to do any > more thanks to uncle Super. > > Are we all feeling like good dobee's now?
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