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Right on Norman.. It took me years of studying everything
to realize that there is no one magical easy money-making
indicator..
I use Fibonacci, combined with specific MACD and Stochastic
settings, a 3X3 displace moving average, and an Overbought/Oversold
predictor that predicts where future price extremes are.
It might sound overwhelming, but its not...
Very important is the trading Methodology. As important as
the tools (indicators).
The combination of the indicators and tools tells me
a) Whether I want to go long or short.
b) Where I want to enter and exit.
c) Where to place a "safe" stop.
d) Whether to be cautious or aggressive. (Trade big or small).
e) When to know whether I'm right or wrong.
f) What to do in each case (right or wrong).
I'm sure you, and other traders operate in a similar
environment..
-Neal.
At 10:46 PM 5/16/2001 -0400, you wrote:
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Neal Hughes" <neal@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>To: <realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2001 1:41 PM
>Subject: Re: [RT] Re: Fibo Research
>
>
> >
> > List members,
> >
> > Fibs are a lot of fun, and can be very accurate and consistent. But
> > not on their own! You can't just blindly trade Fibs, you need to
> > combine some lagging indicators..
> >
> > Fibonacci gives you a look into the future. They tell you where
> > future support and resistance is, BEFORE price gets there. This
> > is very powerful. But to the novice, it is very dangerous too. Novices
> > are usually wishing for a magical indicator that will easily tell them
> > when to get in and out.. Hehehe..
>
>
>NW: Neal, you raise an excellent point. Too many are under the assumption
>that a particular methodology or technique must be a stand alone money
>machine or it is invalid. I take a more eclectic view and say if I can use
>many tools and methods and each gives me a 5-10% edge, then it can all adds
>up to a significant advantage. Take a cup of Fibonacci, mix in some Gann
>angles,
>stir with some Elliott, and mix vigorously with some Astro. Any one of these
>by themselves may not be sufficient to use for a complete and successful
>trading system. However, when using a broad mix, independent corroboration
>sometimes occurs. When all systems converge, that is a beautiful thing.
>
>Cheers,
>
>Norman
>
>
> >
> > As with ANY trading tool, you will find they work sometimes, but
> > not others. How do you decide when to believe them?
> >
> > After years of studying and applying, I can say that this is a
> > learnable skill and that you can become very good at it. But don't
> > expect a computer to figure it out and make decisions for you.
> >
> > It would take a lot of explaining, but here are some pointers:
> > 1) Trade only with the trend, OR with a good directional pattern.
> > (directional patterns can over-rule trend, actually predict a change
> > of trend before it happens).
> > 2) Get good at watching the MACD and Stochastic in different
> > time-frames. This will tell you exactly which fib level is most
> > likely to turn price.
> > 3) Give preference to trades which put your entry or stop in
> > an area of Confluence or Agreement (some people call this
> > clustering).
> > 4) Employ entry techniques which reduce the need for you
> > to guess! Enter when a Fib level is actually supporting
> > or resisting, not before. This is not essential, but is highly
> > recommended for those who are learning Fibonacci techniques.
> >
> > There are more advanced techniques to make your win-loss ratio
> > really impressive, but you're not going to learn all of those via email..
> > The above is a good start. With some study and experience you
> > can boost your performance with Fibonacci techniques.
> >
> > Years ago I did a web-based survey, asking traders why Fibonacci
> > techniques work.. The results were interesting.. What is important,
> > is that they work.
> >
> > -Neal.
> >
> >
> > At 03:13 PM 5/16/2001 +0000, you wrote:
> > >To me, there are two practical problems with fib #s on their own: 1)
> > >lack of consistent precision -- people still put stops just beyond
> > >them, tempting the boys to run them when they can. So while they are
> > >sometimes precise enough to be useful, it isn't consistent. Also,
> > >there are times when log scale works and times when lin does. 2) How
> > >do you decide which fib # is going to work? Sometimes clusters help,
> > >but not consistently.
> > >
> > >I have come to respect angular geometry techniques like Andrews more
> > >than fib for turning points. Much more precise. Amazingly, there is
> > >usually an Andrews reason for those turns just above, just below, or
> > >nowhere near fib #s. I still look at fibs, but as a secondary
> > >consideration.
> > >
> > >I don't know how this could ever be tested other than manually
> > >though, not in TS anyway. The code for the best fit for Andrews
> > >would be pretty darn big.
> > >
> > >Chris
> > >
> > >
> > >--- In realtraders@xxxx, "Dan Harels" <harelsdb@xxxx> wrote:
> > > > This is directed to Research, however, I encourage others with
> > >insights to
> > > > reply.
> > > >
> > > > In a previous post, Research indicated that he is fond of figuring
> > >things
> > > > out and that a good share of his trading profits go towards
> > >computational
> > > > power. Mr. Research has established his credibility in my mind and
> > >I am
> > > > curious if he has performed any studies related to the statistical
> > >validity,
> > > > from a trading point of view, of Fibonacci retracements and
> > >expansions. Any
> > > > information he cares to share on this subject will be appreciated.
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > >
> > > > Dan
> > > >
> > > > _________________________________________________________________
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