How to Day Trade for a Living


Top Reversal Strategy with an indecision



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How to Day Trade for a Living A Beginner’s Guide to Trading Tools and Tactics, Money Management, Discipline and Trading Psychology ( PDFDrive )

Top Reversal Strategy with an indecision 
Shooting Star 
candlestick formed as sign of entry.
In reversal trading, you look for either Doji or indecision candlesticks. They are an indication
that the trend may soon change. In Reversal Strategies, you are looking for a clear confirmation
that the pattern is beginning to reverse. What you definitely don’t want is to be on the wrong
side of a reversal trade, or, as we call it, “catching a falling knife”. It doesn’t sound like a good
idea in real life and it's not a good idea in trading. It means that when a stock is selling off badly
(the falling knife), you don’t want to buy on the assumption that it should bounce. If the stocks
are dropping, you want to wait for the confirmation of the reversal. This will usually be (1) the
formation of a Doji or indecision candle and (2) the first 1-minute or the first 5-minute candle to
reach a new high. That is my entry point. I set my stop at the lows.
In reversal trading, the RSI should be at the extremes (above 90, below 10), and that final
candle should be outside the Bollinger Bands. Once you have your entry requirements listed,
you must then look for an actual entry. An entry for me is going to be either the first 1-minute or
the first 5-minute candle to reach a new high.
When you’ve had a long run of consecutive candles making new lows, the first candle that
makes the new high is very significant. That’s my entry point. There are times when I’ll use the
1-minute chart, but typically I’ll wait for the 5-minute chart because it is a much better
confirmation. The 5-minute chart is cleaner. The first 5-minute candle to make a new high is the
point at which I get in the reversal, with a stop either at the low of the day or simply down
around 20 to 30 cents. Usually, if a stock goes 30 cents against me, I will admit defeat,
recognize that I mistimed my entry, and try again rather than continue to hold. At times,
especially on stocks that are more expensive or more volatile, I’ll simply use a 20- or 30-cent
arbitrary stop if the low of the day is too far away.
Once you’re in one of these trades, your exit indicators are quite simple. If the stock pops up
and then suddenly moves back down on a bottom bounce, you stop out for a loss. If you jump in
the stock and it ends up just going sideways, it’s a sign that you are probably going to see a flag
(a reverse flag), and that is an indication that the price is probably going to continue to drop. If I
get in and I hold for a few minutes and the price stays flat, I get out, no matter what happens


after that. I may be wrong, but so be it, I don’t like to expose my account to the unknown. I need
to be in the right setup, and if it is not ready yet, I’m out. If I get into the profit zone, I can start
adjusting my stop, first to break-even, and then to the low of the last 5-minute candle. I will
then keep adjusting my stop as I move up.
You must realize that almost all of the big moves will eventually be corrected. What goes up,
must come down. In Reversal Strategies, one of the main advantages is the opportunity to watch
stocks that are running up, while simultaneously calculating possible resistance points and areas
that could provide a good reversal opportunity. This allows you to resist being impulsive and
rushing into the trade. You can instead take your time to watch the trade develop and wait for
the momentum to begin to shift.
An important metaphor many traders use when talking about Reversal Strategies is that of a
rubber band. When stocks become really stretched out to the downside, then inevitably they’re
due for a correction. So, when a stock is really squeezing down, you will know that at some
point it’s going to make a bounce, and you want to be in there for the bounce. What you
definitely don’t want to be is to be the one still selling. As I said before, that’s like “catching a
falling knife”. If stocks are dropping, you want to wait for the confirmation of the reversal. This
will probably be the first 1-minute or the first 5-minute candle to make a new high. That’s my
cue to jump in. I set my stop at the lows.

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