Quantcast
  Free Trial!
  Today’s Best Stocks To Trade!   
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




Season Of The Swing
By Alan Farley | TradingMarkets.com
Stocks RSS

Alan S. Farley is a new weekly contributor to TradingMarkets.com. Watch for his swing-trading insights every Thursday at 4:20 ET.

Can you feel the winds of change?

The market world is changing quickly for the retail trader. Yet few see the vast impact on strategies, position choices and broker accounts. Three major forces are converging to dramatically alter the short-term trading landscape. In fact, your long-term success in market speculation requires that you adapt quickly to this challenging new environment. Fortunately, there is still time to act. We are right in the middle of this revolution, and you can still apply dependable tactics if you adjust quickly to the new game.

1. Life After The Bear

First, let's consider where we've come from. Throughout the 1990s, the upside momentum trader ruled the roost. Whether buying the dip or buying high and selling higher, simple strategies promised a comfortable road to quick fortunes. The secular bull brought thousands of new faces into the trading game and spawned a giant industry of high-speed technologies, software interfaces and market gurus. Even waitresses and shoeshine boys got caught in this wave of public excitement and tossed their precious savings into e-broker accounts so they could grab their share of this great giveaway.

We all know what happened next. Fortunes were lost and careers were ended when the market played directly to the weak hands of the majority: lack of defensive risk management and profit protection. As the selloff continued, participants fell into an expensive trap and tried to play the broad decline by applying the same tactics that worked so well on the trip up. Unfortunately, the trading gods never give up their gifts so easily. Common knowledge of a broad market condition eventually closes the system inefficiency that allows easy profit. Sometimes the market can adapt quickly and shut off profitable strategies in a matter of days. But in our latest example, it took an entire bull run of almost a decade before it crushed the faithful.

The first reaction by many traders aware of the changing conditions was to shift from the upside momentum game to selling short in the massive selloff. This appeared to be a logical move, but carried one fatal flaw: it required careful application of the same risk-management techniques that defeated so many participants in the first place. Short squeezes erupted without warning and took out many traders who had survived the initial violent turn in March 2000. More and more downside momentum players entered the game as the decline evolved. Squeezes became less dangerous and many short-term traders started to feel like market wizards all over again.

Which brings us to the current trading environment.

The financial markets may or may not be in the process of forming a long-term bottom. But one thing is for certain: successful trading in the next few years will be far more different than during the go-go times of the 1990s. For example, those who believe we will see a V-type bottom with the indices charging back to old highs are in mortal danger. Upside momentum in the early days of this new millennium will be an elusive trading partner. So if you haven't made a tactical and mental shift already, start immediately to trade the many stages of the short-term market swing. This classic strategy will become your best friend as you work to rebuild your account in order to capitalize on the next broad market trend.

AMGN Daily
Amgen spends five months going nowhere. But the sideways action hides 18 distinct price thrusts that translate into swing-trading profits. Note how the multicolored MACD Bands expose a natural market "wobble" that often turns price right at expected reversal levels.


How does swing trading differ from momentum trading? In the narrowest definition, swing traders respond to the world of price boundaries. They expect support and resistance to hold when price contacts these important levels. Alternatively, momentum traders respond to the world of price breakouts and breakdowns. They expect support and resistance to fail when price contacts these same levels. But an even more powerful view of swing trading should be applied to our brave new world.

Swing trading provides a natural framework to identify changing conditions and apply new methods to exploit them. Use its classic tactics to buy weakness and sell strength when choppy markets shift back and forth to test common boundaries. But realize that swing trading is not really the opposite of momentum trading. During those times when directional movement characterizes a market, disciplined momentum strategy becomes the preferred swing trade. In this way, modern swing traders can apply the principles of risk management and price boundaries to the manic world of the speculator.

2. Dirty Decimals

The retail trading industry in the 1990s was fueled by new software that allowed traders to exercise scalping strategies that had been the exclusive domain of the institutional crowd. Members of this exclusive club saw the promise of these new execution systems and opened dozens of direct-access brokerages and alternative routing platforms. What happened next is now part of market folklore.

The limitations of Level II scalping have been well documented over the last year or two. Now that the dust is settling, most recognize that teaching this frantic trading method to new market participants was a terrible mistake and doomed most of them to failure. But many who survived the cleansing process were able to make a decent living buying the bid and selling the ask. Meanwhile, the rest of us stood aside and watched this dynamic process through heightened market volatility and technical violations of known intraday support and resistance levels.

Decimalization alters the playing field for these intense short-term tactics. Evidence is quickly mounting that even good scalpers cannot duplicate the financial results they enjoyed before the changeover. Linked trading tactics also appear to be experiencing death by pennies. Many players make their livings by fading scalpers through sharp stop-gunning exercises and short squeezes. But like feet stuck in the mud, they are having great difficulty pushing price through the endless penny tiers in order to shake out the opposition.

Once again, swing trading comes to the rescue. The revolution in high-speed trade execution opens swing strategies that last for minutes instead of days. Dependable price patterns appear on charts in all time frames. Retail scalpers are quickly finding that intraday swing setups on one-minute and five-minute charts offer the same opportunities that appear daily on longer-term charts. And the swing revolution started by decimalization does not end there. Institutional scalpers and market makers are quickly adapting their contrary tactics to this chart-based trading style and abandoning the pure spread game.

AMGN 1-minute
Amgen trades within a single point during four hours of intraday action. But the one-minute price chart reveals predictable breakouts and reversal scalps throughout the session. Note how the price-expansion levels in the shaded areas can be captured by intraday swing traders but will probably be missed by the herd of Level II scalpers.


3. Evil Pattern Daytraders

Pattern Daytrader does not refer to the scalper who uses a chart to make buying and selling decisions. It denotes the "black mark" that your broker-dealer must place on your account if you violate a new SEC rule, starting this September. The PDT is anyone who completes four or more intraday round trips in a consecutive five-day period. Once you are marked as a PDT, you must maintain $25,000 or more in your trading account or it will be reverted from margin to cash status.

This sounds simple enough at first glance. So simple that it was heavily supported by the brokerage industry when the rule was first proposed in early 2000. At that time, there was an endless supply of new talent that the brokers expected to open accounts for. They were also willing to do anything they could to get the stigma of daytrading (and SEC audit trails) off of their backs. And many direct-access brokers already had a $25K or more account requirement, so they felt there was little to lose in going along with the proposal.

But that was then, and this is now. The trading industry has fallen on hard times in the falling market. Account growth has stagnated or declined at many firms. Many direct-access broker/dealers are becoming painfully aware how much they depend upon small trading accounts at discount houses to train their future clients. Many new retail traders use the lower risk of small discount accounts to build their intraday execution skills (and profits) so they can someday transfer to direct-access. But soon this core talent will be getting very unfriendly mail telling them to change their methods, or place new funds into their accounts. This will likely cut off the major source of direct-access growth.

But the rules affect only daytraders, right? Wrong. Consider this: in volatile markets, how often do you realize you've made a terrible mistake just after entering a new position trade? Wise risk management tells you to get out immediately in that situation. Now what happens if you run a bad streak and find yourself doing this four times in one week? You've just become a Pattern Daytrader.

AMGN Daily
Position traders may become Pattern Daytraders when they make mistakes or exercise sound risk management. Each shaded zone invites ill-timed positions in the wrong direction. Common sense dictates that these positions should be abandoned as soon as possible, in order to limit losses. But doing so invites major trouble with your broker if you are trading a small account.


Statistics on trading accounts point out that we are a nation of small players. The percentage of us who consistently set aside $25,000 or more for market speculation is quite small. So expect this new rule to greatly diminish the role of daytrading in modern market life. What does this mean to you? Two possible consequences come to mind. First, intraday liquidity and volatility may diminish significantly as this rule couples with decimalization to cool the short-term trading environment. Second, swing-trading tactics will grow exponentially within this small-account universe because these traders will realize it's their only alternative for learning the market game.

Brave New World

Paradoxically, technical analysis will likely become a more dependable tool because of these significant changes. Pattern failure and violations of classic TA principles have become the norm since the trading masses discovered price charts in the late 1990s. Its great popularity attracted a core of contrary tactics designed to defeat these novice chart readers. As the current market shakeout continues, less warm bodies will be trying to gauge every triangle or double bottom formation for a trade setup. This is extremely good for serious practitioners of technical trading.

We can be certain of only one thing: the financial markets will undergo continuous change throughout our trading careers. That's one of the greatest challenges for modern speculators. We come into the game being taught that one or two dependable strategies will serve us well over the long haul. Unfortunately, the market always knows that we're here, and what we're trying to do. It adjusts to defeat the majority at every turn. So we must do our best to see changes early, adjust quickly, and jump onto the money train before the herd charges in our direction.

Alan Farley is a professional trader and the publisher of the Hard Right Edge http://www.hardrightedge.com web site, a comprehensive online resource for traders. He is the author of the best-selling McGraw-Hill release, The Master Swing Trader. Alan has been part of the market scene for over 14 years as a private investor, advisor and author. In addition to trading, writing and speaking, Alan has been featured in Barron's, Smart Money, Tech Week, MoneyCentral, Bridge Trader, Technical Investor and TheStreet.com. He has consulted with the major news services on issues facing today's online traders and is a strong voice for the Net revolution changing the face of our modern financial markets.

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.