标题: Trading Price Action Trading Ranges 交易价格行为的成交价格幅度 [打印本页] 作者: 操盘手 时间: 2017-12-31 11:49 标题: Trading Price Action Trading Ranges 交易价格行为的成交价格幅度 Trading Price Action Trading Ranges 交易价格行为的成交价格幅度 (PDF格式,在最佳效果在移动设备上)
**** 本内容需购买 ****Trading Price Action Trading Ranges 交易价格行为的成交价格幅度65M PDF格式
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A detailed guide to spotting and profiting from trading ranges using the technical analysis of price action
内容简介
The introduction to this book will be short and related only to this volume.The market is either trending or in a trading range and it is often transitioning from one to the other.When the market is transitioning from a trading range into a trend, it is breaking out.Since trends were just discussed in the first book, this second book begins with how trading ranges turn into trends, which are now familiar to the reader.It explains why breakouts form and why they end, which is always at some kind of support or resistance area.The market gets drawn quickly to these areas and because of this pull, I refer to them as magnets.As the breakout is unfolding, traders can use several mathematical techniques to measure where the trend will likely end and then begin to form a trading range, and these measured moves are discussed in detail.Once the market reaches a magnet, it then pauses and pulls back, and usually then resumes.Pullbacks are reliable setups and the book describes them and how to trade them in detail.If a pullback grows so large that it is uncertain if the trend will resume or reverse, it has become a trading range.Most markets are in trading ranges most of the time and therefore most trades that traders make are within trading ranges.Understanding them and how to trade them is critical to anyone trying to make a living as a trader.Traders need to know how to place orders to get into and out of trades and it is useful to know how to scale into and out of positions.Also, mathematics is the basis for all trading.Every trader asks himself, Will I make money if I take this trade? This means that the traders is making a statistical analysis of what he sees based on risk, reward, and probability, and understanding this math makes trading less stressful and more profitable.
目录
Cover
Series
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
List of Terms Used in This Book
Introduction
HOW TO READ THESE BOOKS
SIGNS OF STRENGTH: TRENDS, BREAKOUTS, REVERSAL BARS, AND REVERSALS
BAR COUNTING BASICS: HIGH 1, HIGH 2, LOW 1, LOW 2
Part I: Breakouts: Transitioning into a New Trend
Chapter 1: Example of How to Trade a Breakout
Chapter 2: Signs of Strength in a Breakout
Chapter 3: Initial Breakout
Chapter 4: Breakout Entries in Existing Strong Trends
Chapter 5: Failed Breakouts, Breakout Pullbacks, and Breakout Tests
Chapter 6: Gaps
Part II: Magnets: Support and Resistance
Chapter 7: Measured Moves Based on the Size of the First Leg (the Spike)
Chapter 8: Measured Moves Based on Gaps and Trading Ranges
Chapter 9: Reversals Often End at Signal Bars from Prior Failed Reversals
Chapter 10: Other Magnets
Part III: Pullbacks: Trends Converting to Trading Ranges
Chapter 11: First Pullback Sequence: Bar, Minor Trend Line, Moving Average, Moving Average Gap, Major Trend Line
Chapter 12: Double Top Bear Flags and Double Bottom Bull Flags
Chapter 13: Twenty Gap Bars
Chapter 14: First Moving Average Gap Bars
Chapter 15: Key Inflection Times of the Day That Set Up Breakouts and Reversals
Chapter 16: Counting the Legs of Trends and Trading Ranges
Chapter 17: Bar Counting: High and Low 1, 2, 3, and 4 Patterns and ABC Corrections
Chapter 18: Wedge and Other Three-Push Pullbacks
Chapter 19: Dueling Lines: Wedge Pullback to the Trend Line
Chapter 20: “Reversal” Patterns: Double Tops and Bottoms and Head and Shoulders Tops and Bottoms
Part IV: Trading Ranges
Chapter 21: Example of How to Trade a Trading Range
Chapter 22: Tight Trading Ranges
Chapter 23: Triangles
Part V: Orders and Trade Management
Chapter 24: Scalping, Swinging, Trading, and Investing
Chapter 25: Mathematics of Trading: Should I Take This Trade? Will I Make Money If I Take This Trade?
THE TRADER'S EQUATION
DIRECTIONAL PROBABILITY
Chapter 26: Need Two Reasons to Take a Trade
Chapter 27: Entering on Stops
Chapter 28: Entering on Limits
Chapter 29: Protective and Trailing Stops
Chapter 30: Profit Taking and Profit Targets
Chapter 31: Scaling Into and Out of a Trade
Chapter 32: Getting Trapped In or Out of a Trade
About the Author
About the Website
Index