Source : http://www.atradeaday.com/2007/11/06/how-i-trade-support-and-resistance/
Support and resistance is a fundamental concept in trading. I would
suspect most of the readers of this blog have at least a basic
understanding of how support and resistance works in markets.
Here is a good definition of support and resistance. What I wanted to talk about is how I use it in my trading activities.
I trade with three fundamental attributes of support and resistance:
1. For me, support and resistance are zones, not finite numbers.
The greater the timeframe, the more this attribute applies. I am
looking at daily charts and longer, I draw the support and resistance
zone as 1/4 ATR beyond
the level of support. I expect that price will begin to change
direction in this area. Combined with moving averages and certain
patterns, like the hammer, this has worked well.
2. Support/resistance is validated by the number of times the zone is touched. Corey at afraid to trade used this “number of times touched method” as one measure to assess the validity of trend lines.
I share his conclusions. When I observe price bounce off a zone of
support and resistance multiple times, I know that zone is strong. It’s
my interpretation that the higher the time frame (days, weeks,
months…), the more powerful the zone has become.
3. Don’t forget pivots when trading intraday.
Perhaps using pivots deserve their own article. Pivots are areas of
support and resistance calculated from the previous day’s high, low,
open, and close. The true value in the pivot numbers is that they are
widely followed. The whole concept of support and resistance is that
support and resistance holds because so many traders buy or sell when
price hits a certain number. This is exactly why pivots are useful from
an intraday perspective. Pivot points are generally calculated the same
way. So when you look at a widely traded contract like the emini
S&P, price will bounce, consolidate, and break around pivot points.
Here is an excellent pivot point calculator.
Hope this got you thinking about how you use support and resistance
in your own trading. It’s an easy concept to understand, so it’s easy
to brush off as not as important.
Good Luck!
Support and resistance is a fundamental concept in trading. I would
suspect most of the readers of this blog have at least a basic
understanding of how support and resistance works in markets.
Here is a good definition of support and resistance. What I wanted to talk about is how I use it in my trading activities.
I trade with three fundamental attributes of support and resistance:
1. For me, support and resistance are zones, not finite numbers.
The greater the timeframe, the more this attribute applies. I am
looking at daily charts and longer, I draw the support and resistance
zone as 1/4 ATR beyond
the level of support. I expect that price will begin to change
direction in this area. Combined with moving averages and certain
patterns, like the hammer, this has worked well.
2. Support/resistance is validated by the number of times the zone is touched. Corey at afraid to trade used this “number of times touched method” as one measure to assess the validity of trend lines.
I share his conclusions. When I observe price bounce off a zone of
support and resistance multiple times, I know that zone is strong. It’s
my interpretation that the higher the time frame (days, weeks,
months…), the more powerful the zone has become.
3. Don’t forget pivots when trading intraday.
Perhaps using pivots deserve their own article. Pivots are areas of
support and resistance calculated from the previous day’s high, low,
open, and close. The true value in the pivot numbers is that they are
widely followed. The whole concept of support and resistance is that
support and resistance holds because so many traders buy or sell when
price hits a certain number. This is exactly why pivots are useful from
an intraday perspective. Pivot points are generally calculated the same
way. So when you look at a widely traded contract like the emini
S&P, price will bounce, consolidate, and break around pivot points.
Here is an excellent pivot point calculator.
Hope this got you thinking about how you use support and resistance
in your own trading. It’s an easy concept to understand, so it’s easy
to brush off as not as important.
Good Luck!
Wed Oct 05, 2011 12:39 pm by SHARETIPSINFO
» DOUBT IN F & O
Wed Oct 13, 2010 4:53 pm by PRAKASH5000
» Selll Tatacom, Stbt for Sep 22nd
Thu Sep 23, 2010 12:58 pm by mr.traderji
» Allahabad Bank , Stay away from here on
Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:04 am by mr.traderji
» Speculative Trade on Acc , Btst for Aug 12 th
Mon Sep 06, 2010 12:52 pm by mr.traderji
» Canadian Finance Minister Caught Taking Illegal Bribe Kickbacks!
Mon Sep 06, 2010 5:24 am by johnny saigon
» Tatamotors Can top out @ 1060 , Sell it
Thu Aug 26, 2010 9:00 am by mr.traderji
» Buy SyndBank today , Aug 13th
Thu Aug 19, 2010 3:38 pm by mr.traderji
» Videocon industries , Big boys will enter soon !
Thu Aug 19, 2010 3:36 pm by mr.traderji