Quantcast
  Free Trial!
  Learn Which Are The Best Stocks To Trade Today!   
Click Here


Quote


Stocks

Trading Ideas

Short Term
Long Term
All Trading Ideas


Trading Lessons

Strategies
Courses
Interviews
Glossary
All Trading Lessons


Daily Stock Setups

Connors Daily Battle Plan
Haggerty Professional
Kaltbaum Intra-day Set-ups
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
TM Indicators


Trading News

Markets Updates
Technical Alerts
Breaking News


PowerRatings

Short Term
Long Term
Charts


Indicators

Stocks
Market Bias


Quotes

Markets
Stocks
Charts
Level II
Historical Data
Options


Trading Contests

Up or Down




A Technique For Trapping Pullbacks
By Dan Chesler | TradingMarkets.com
Stocks RSS

Trends are a good thing. But chasing trends can sometimes lead to buying the high tick or selling the low tick – not a good thing. Thus one approach that many traders gravitate toward is that of buying dips in an uptrend and selling rallies in a downtrend. This practice, which has withstood the test of time, is referred to generically as buying or selling a pullback. 

In this lesson I’ll show you a simple mechanical method for qualifying pullbacks. The Stoch-Trap is not a mechanical trading system, nor does it generate strict buy and sell signals. Like other technical patterns, its function is to isolate specific recurring conditions in price action. If you test this method on a mechanical basis, there is a slight positive statistical edge, but not one you might trade blindly. Its real edge comes from putting you in sync with the market’s short-term cyclical movements. Combined with proper risk and money management techniques, the Stoch-Trap can be a powerful tool and is one I have used successfully in my own trading.

Some background. When I first got involved in technical trading, I was fascinated by pullback strategies. I felt like I had discovered a sneaky method of following the trend while still getting in "on the cheap." One of the first methods I learned in this regard was the 3/10 MACD oscillator method popularized by trader Linda Raschke. I also explored many other methods for identifying pullbacks. After pouring through dozens of different oscillators, chart patterns and parameter sets, I came to the conclusion that the best short-term cycle indicator was the four-period Stochastic %K line. Most charting packages plot the Stochastic indicator using two lines: %K and %D. The %K line is the faster of the two lines and is the only one I look at. Of all the indicators I studied, none had the ability to highlight short-term overbought and oversold levels as consistently or as clearly as this indicator.

The Stoch-Trap setup uses the four-period Stochastic %K in combination with a second indicator for establishing the longer time frame trend, such as a 50-period simple moving average or the 5/35 MACD. I will illustrate the setup using both of these indicators.

A Stoch-Trap BUY setup occurs when: the four-period Stochastic %K is less than 21 and the close is above the 50-day simple moving average, or the 5/35 MACD is greater than zero (positive). Conversely, a Stoch-Trap SELL setup occurs when the four-period Stochastic %K is greater than 79 and the close is below the 50-day simple moving average, or the 5/35 MACD is less than zero (negative).

Following a Stoch-Trap setup, I look to enter the trade after the first 30 to 60 minutes of the day, after the market has made its morning low or high, on a breakout of the morning range. The best trades occur when the market gaps up or down slightly against the longer-term trend (a very large gap is something you do not want to fade) or opens near the previous day’s closing price. The rationale here is that the market is short-term oversold within the context of a larger time frame trend, thus a slight gap down (for buys) or up (for sells) merely pushes the market that much closer to its ultimate short-term bottom or top before resuming its main trend.   

Let’s begin by showing a few examples of the Stoch-Trap in action.

In this chart, we see International Business Machine (IBM) has the conditions for a Stoch-Trap sell in mid-February. The stochastic is above 79, and the price close is below the 50-day moving average. The next morning, IBM gaps slightly higher and then forms a trading range for most of the day. When IBM breaks down through the morning low, at 107.80, a short trade is entered. The next day, IBM gaps lower more than three dollars and proceeds to sell off over ten dollars the next several days.

 

I’ve selected charts of the Biotech (BBH) and S&P Mid-Cap (MDY) exchange traded funds to demonstrate other examples of the Stoch-Trap pattern. Green dots represent long setups, and red dots represent short setups. As you can see from these examples, the method is not a panacea. In early December of last year, the S&P Mid-Cap signaled a failed long entry. However, two days later, another long Stoch-Trap signal kicked in again, giving a good trade. In the last chart of Microsoft (MSFT), I show an example of how to use the 5/35 MACD as a trend filter, rather than the 50-day moving average. 


 

 

Once a trade has been entered, I like to keep the initial stop in place for one to two days in order to give the trade room to develop. If after two days the market has moved in the direction of the trade and shows a profit, I will then tighten the stop up to the high or low of the current bar.  

The Stoch-Trap method highlights short-term cycle highs and lows that might otherwise go unnoticed by visual inspection alone, while helping us trade in the direction of the longer-term trend. The essence of any pullback strategy is to find spots where the price does not spend much time "hanging around." Price is here today and gone tomorrow, or if we’re very fortunate, gone in the next five minutes.

Again, the Stoch-Trap is not a strict mechanical system. Like any discretionary pattern or setup, it takes some studying and practice in order to separate the trades with the greatest potential for success from the marginal candidates. For example, when prices are very close to crossing over from one side of the moving average to the other, or when the MACD is very close to zero rather than distinctly above or below zero, we know the market is nearing a trend change. At these points a greater degree of judgment is necessary before entering the trade. Also, after the market has made multi-week climax lows or highs, we want to be aware of the potential for "V" bottoms or tops and avoid fading the first reactions from these points. A trend change will not always be signaled early enough to keep us out of these situations. Although I have shown you only daily charts, I also find this pattern works well on weekly and intraday charts.

For The Best Trading Books, Video Courses and Software To Improve Your Trading Click Here


Stocks RSS
Related Articles

PREMIER SPONSORED LINKS
TRADE CENTER

The TradingMarkets Directory
Stocks
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis
PowerRatings
Training Classes
Tools
Stock Scanner
Daily Market Bias

Options
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis

Forex
How to Trade
Forex Momentum Index
Pivots

E-mini/Futures
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Daily Market Bias

How to Trade
Stocks
Options
Forex
E-mini/Futures
Glossary

Tools
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Stock Screener
Quotes & Charts
Stock Indicators
Market bias Indicators

PowerRatings
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Industry PowerRatings
PowerRatings Charts
Training Classes
PowerRatings Strategies
Search PowerRatings

Trading Contests
Up or Down Stock Contest
#1 - Win $1000 every month

Up or Down Forex Contest -
Win $1000 every month


Premium Subscription Services
Short Term PowerRatings Free Trial
Long Term PowerRatings Free Trial
TradingMarkets Subscription Free Trial
Daily Battle Plan Free Trial
Gary Kaltbaum - Intraday Breaking Alerts Free Trial
Kevin Haggerty Professional Trading Service Free Trial
Forex Force with Mark Whistler Free Trial

RELATED SITES
Nothing but forex





All analyst commentary provided on TradingMarkets.com is provided for educational purposes only. The analysts and employees or affiliates of TradingMarkets.com may hold positions in the stocks or industries discussed here. This information is NOT a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Your use of this and all information contained on TradingMarkets.com is governed by the Terms and Conditions of Use. Please click the link to view those terms. Follow this link to read our Editorial Policy.

© 2008 The Connors Group, Inc.