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Heikin Ashi Trader

Trade Against the Trend

Trade Against the Trend!

The brokerage industry usually recommends that new traders trade with the trend. But is trading this way profitable? It is said that if you go with the trend, the likelihood that you will win is higher. Unfortunately, experience shows that most traders cannot build a profitable business this way.

Old and experienced traders used to say: You have to buy when blood flows in the streets. That means that you should act against the trend. Actually, this saying is the expression of common sense itself. The question remains: Why do  traders find it so hard to put this wisdom into practice?

The new book by Heikin Ashi Trader gives ideas and tips on how to recognize such countertrend signals in the stock market, since these are usually the best trading opportunities.

Table of Contents

Part 1: The Snapback Trading Strategy

Chapter 1: Trade when the mass is afraid

Chapter 2: Why I do not follow the trend

Chapter 3: Mean Reversion

Chapter 4: Risk Management

Chapter 5: How do I recognize extreme movements?

Chapter 6: Patience at the entry

Chapter 7: Does the stop really protect me from heavy losses?

Chapter 8: Trade Management

Chapter 9: Exit

Chapter 10: When do the best trading opportunities occur?

Chapter 11: Why you should study the economic calendar

Chapter 12: Which markets are suitable for the snapback strategy?

Part 2: Trading Examples

Chapter 1: Examples in the stock indices

Chapter 2: Examples in the currency markets (Forex)

Chapter 3: Examples in the stock markets

Chapter 4: Examples in the commodity markets

Glossary

About the Author

Heikin Ashi Trader is the pen name of a trader who has more than 18 years of experience in day trading futures and foreign exchange. He specializes in scalping and fast day trading. In addition to this, he has published multiple self-explanatory books on his trading activities. Popular topics are on: scalping, swing trading, money— and risk management.

80 páginas impresas
Publicación original
2019
Año de publicación
2019
Editorial
DAO Press
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  • Aaaa Bbbbcompartió una citahace 3 meses
    Chapter 2: Why I do not follow the trend

    Buy high and sell higher or sell low and buy lower. This is the mantra of trend followers. It sounds like common sense. Usually, that is what almost the entire trading industry recommends constantly. Reason enough to be skeptical.

    The problem is, trend trading does not work for most traders. Now, you could blame me for trying to trade lows and highs at a mere guess. For who knows where the high or the low of the day or the week will be? Nobody.

    That may be true. However, that is why switching to trend-following is just as much "guessing" for me. Because the assumption that the market will continue in the current trend direction, is just a guess. How could I know for sure?

    For me, traders who want to follow the trend act subliminally even out of fear. They want to feel "safe" in the herd, because the herd follows the trend. It is always safer, or it feels safer when you go with the crowd, so, with the trend. Since the masses are on the safe path, and are afraid of being noticed, the results of this path are generally mediocre as well.

    The best you can expect if you go this way, are moderate profits. That is why I say that if you want to among the winners on the stock market, you will have to look your fear in the eye. You will have to learn to walk a lonely path and you will surely have to learn to act against the majority of traders.

    That is why I am a contrarian, a trader who acts against the trend. I am a trader who goes long when the whole world is short and vice versa. This is uncomfortable and certainly not for everyone. That is why it is important to understand why my countertrend method works. I would like to explain this in the next chapters.
  • Aaaa Bbbbcompartió una citahace 3 meses
    Some traders may take my approach for granted. They should not. You would wonder how many traders buy or sell at points in the chart that are irrelevant. That is why I say: trade only when you feel afraid.

    For people who are not used to trading, such an assertion could seem absurd. How can you risk money on the basis of fear! However, that is exactly what it is all about. If you only have a little experience on the stock market, you know that things are not rational here, as economists and analysts would like it to be. The stock market is often crazy. Almost every day, you can experience some kind of exaggeration. And that is exactly what real traders make their money with.

    If the stock market were a rational entity (as the stock market engineers, as I call them, suggest), then there would be no reason to enter it. Because then every price that the charts indicate would be a rational price and justified by the so-called fundamental data. Then the market efficiency hypothesis would have won. The market efficiency hypothesis states that stock market prices reflect all the information available in that market. Everyone who has only a bit of trading experience knows that this is not the case.

    However, the question is not: “How do you subdue this irrational thing called the stock market?” That is what the stock market engineers are trying to do. They design strategies based on back testing, that are spat out by their computer programs. There is nothing wrong with that. I have developed some myself, and I have written a nice little book about it. I know this way of thinking well and respect the traders who choose this way.

    I wrote this book for traders who are more inclined to listen to their instincts. If you learn to listen to your gut, you can have the same success on the stock market as someone who calculates the whole thing and then runs it from a computer program. I would like to ask that the lady and gentleman engineers leave the room now. Those who I call the “crazy traders” can stay. These are the traders willing to do things the masses of traders never dare to do. In other words, from now on, we are going to talk about those trades where you get really scared. For as the Roman poet Plautus said: Abducet praedam, qui occurit prior.

    (Latin: The early bird gets the worm)
  • Aaaa Bbbbcompartió una citahace 3 meses
    Anyway, this book is not about penny stock trading and certainly not about illegal practices. Rather, I want to show the reader how to benefit from extreme movements as well, provided he overcomes his fear of doing the opposite of what the herd is doing.

    For example, if a market runs to the north for seven hours, and there are the first signs that the buyers are running out of cash (losing momentum), then you can be sure that I am on the other side of the trade. I am short. And honestly, doing this is scary. Sometimes you might be a little bit scared, sometimes really scared. I am no exception. I am scared too. If the whole market is long, and you have a short position, then you really feel that you are alive.

    Conversely, it is the same. If the market has fallen all day due to some event, and everyone is short, then you can assume that I am long. And this position scares me too. Me against the rest of the world. That is what this book is about: Me against the rest of the world.

    I would not talk about these snapback trades if I did not believe there is a robust trading strategy behind this method. Otherwise, what I am sharing here would be worthless. I would like to make it clear again, that this method is not my invention, but has always been used by smart traders worldwide. Maybe you have not heard of it yet, because those people do not make a fuss about their business. These traders have internalized the method of taking the opposite position of extreme movements, so that they no longer have to think about it. They go short just when the mass of traders do not even dream of going short; if they go short at all (we know that only 1% of investors go short at all).

    Most people just need some kind of "confirmation" that the market has turned and that they should now trade in the other direction. Some might say they need "a signal" to go long or short. There is an entire stock market industry that thrives on delivering such "signals" to inexperienced traders. If you intend to subscribe to such a "signal service", you will lose on the longer term. Believe me, I tried it several times in my early days and always fell on my nose.

    Why? Because when the "signal" comes, the opportunity has already gone. Those signals usually come too late. Think about it: first, the analyst must recognize the signal on the chart. This happens when his indicators give him one. This is mostly when the market has already turned and has gone a bit the other way. Then the analyst (who, by the way, does not act on his own signals - he leaves this to the readers of his signal letter) goes to the computer and begins to write an exciting report, stating that his indicators have given him a significant signal. As a rule, some hours have already passed. If he then writes his report in the mailing list, and finally clicks on "send", several hours have passed before you get the mail. Depending on the size of the signal service, the readers start to buy and eventually, so do you. Think about it. Not everyone is at the start of the food chain.

    The reader may already guess it. If you always wait for confirmation, the caravan will already have moved on. If you get into the market then, you usually get a much worse price than if you had bought, for example, when the market was completely down. That is self-explanatory, one should think. The old German stock market expert Andre Kostolany summarized it aptly: “You have to buy when blood flows in the streets.” Actually, this saying is the expression of common sense itself. The questions I ask are: “Why is it so hard for traders to put this stock market wisdom into practice? And why are many traders so scared to buy when blood flows in the streets? And why are so scared to go short when the rest of the world is long?”

    The claim that I make in this book is simple, but very direct: if you do not experience fear when trading, then the position is probably not worth taking.

    In other words, trade only when you are scared.

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