Today’s Trading Lesson From TradingMarkets

Editor’s Note:

Each night we highlight a lesson from TM University. Learn and profit from these
gems.

Brice

 

I thought it would
be helpful

to analyze a recent trade
that I put out in
Nokia (NOK).
We will take you through the process that I used to select Nokia as a pattern
setup. The procedure begins with stock selection, pattern identification and
entry. This is a good example that demonstrates multiple patterns and how to
select the earliest entry for a high probability trade.

Stock Selection

  • Nokia is on the big-cap

    Core Trading List
    because it is one of top 10 to 20 most widely held
    stocks by the institutions (Generals), which means it is overweighted and has
    excellent sponsorship.

     

  • The stock is trading over its 20,
    50, and 200-day exponential moving averages (EMAs).

     

  • The 20-day EMA is above the 50-EMA,
    which is above the rising 200-EMA. It is a very strong uptrend.

     

  • Nokia is a 91 EPS and 84 RS in
    Investor’s Business Daily. The group strength is A, as are the sales, profit
    margins and ROE (Return on Equity).

     

  • The ADX is rising
    (which is more important than the actual number). ADX number was 28 as of the
    close on March 1. 

     

 Pattern
Identification 

The first thing I look for in
selecting a good pattern setup is a stock that has pulled back at least three
days, closed above the open and above the midpoint of its daily range. Ideally,
the stock should close in the top 25% of its range. An exception to closing
above the open would be if both the open and close were in the top 25% of the
range and the close was slightly below the open.

Having looked at thousands of charts
over the years, I will tell you that the most frequent pullback in uptrends are
3, 5, 8 and 13, which are

Fibonacci numbers
. The next most frequent is 7. 

For short-term trading, we are looking
for pullback to no lower than the 50-day EMA. The strongest stocks will trade
above the 20-EMA. 

Looking at the daily chart below, of
Nokia
(Figure 1),
I see the following indications of a high probability trade.

  • Three-day
    pullback
    (PB) to the 20-day EMA in an
    uptrending stock. (You count the days by starting with the current day or the
    day preceding it. If you were looking for shorts, it would be the subsequent
    day. A five-day pullback had preceded it to give you an example of how to
    count.)

     

  • The third day of the PB closed
    above the open and exactly at the top of its range. I also observed that the
    prior two days closed in the top of their ranges and above their opens,
    despite having lower lows and lower highs. This was positive and indicated a
    market-related PB and not much selling pressure by the Generals. Volume was
    basically neutral.

     

  • The third pullback day was a
    narrow-range inside day which in itself is a pattern. It was also the
    narrowest-range day of the past 15 days. Volatility had contracted and this
    usually precedes explosive moves in either direction. In the case of Nokia,
    you would only take the trade in the direction of the trend, which is
    obviously up.

     

  • Looking at the stock’s activity for
    March 1, which is the narrow-range day labeled #3, I see the following: Open
    199.50; High 201.50; Low 198.50; Close 201.50. Entry is planned on March 2 at
    201 5/8 (or slightly above, if needed) which is 1/8 above the previous day’s
    close.

     

Nokia opens on March 2 at 200.50, with
an intraday low of 200.375. You get trade-through entry at 201.625 and the stock
traded to an intraday high of 215.875.

When you are looking for daily entry
after a pullback, you want to enter on the change in direction, which is usually
above the previous day’s high. Nokia exploded after entry at 201.625 on
excellent volume and a wide range bar expansion (WRB) to new all-time highs. The
follow-up day to the WRB also gave you good entry and a multipoint move.

For those of you that read our trading
guidebook, you will recognize this pattern as a 1,2,3,4 setup which has two
lower lows and an inside day. This is an excellent pattern in itself as it got
you in at the earliest change in direction.

The key point is to enter on the
change in direction because not all tradable pullbacks fit a pattern mold.


 Figure 1.  Nokia Daily Chart. 

^next^

The following charts of
Cisco (Figure 2) and BEA Systems
(Figure 3)
show very clearly the most common pullback days in strongly
trending stocks.


Figure 2. Cisco Daily Chart.

This is an excellent
chart to see the 5, 8 and 7 day pullbacks. X1 is a swing point low and A5 is a
five-day pullback to the 50-day EMA. Cisco made a strong reversal off the 50-day
EMA, closing above the open, at the top of its range, above the prior day’s
high, above the previous three closes, and also above the 20-day EMA. This is a
powerful reversal. It is also a key outside reversal day. The next day was a
multipoint move with good entry.

Cisco rallied to X2 of
139 from X1 of 100, before retracing eight days to B8, still managing to close
above its 20-day EMA.

The move from X2 to B8
retraced .41 of the X1 to X2 top at 139 before exploding to new highs the next
day. Cisco didn’t close in the top of its range or above the open on B8 but the
next day (Feb. 23) it opened at 127 up 3 points, which was right at the previous
day’s high of 127 1/16. It only pulled back to 126 5/16 intraday before
reversing the 127 1/16 high and trading up to 139. The S&P futures were strong pre-opening
and it was a strong rally day for the S&P 500. 

Following the WRB
explosion to new highs, Cisco consolidated in a seven-day pullback to C7. All
the bars were within the wide-range bar (WRB). C7 closed in the top of its
range, above the open and above the 20-day EMA. The next day was a multipoint
move on a pullback entry after a gapped open.

BEA
Systems

This chart gives you a
different look at a combined five-and eight-day pullback, but ends the same way,
giving you good entry and a multipoint move.


Figure 3.  BEA Systems Daily Chart.

X1 was a significant low
(68 7/8) and a five-day pullback to the 50-day EMA. It rallied to the X2 high of
157.75 without any pullback until the WRB key reversal day at X2. BEAS had a
five-day pullback (B5) on wide range bars with the last three closing in the
bottom of the range. The stock held above the 20-day EMA. This five-day pullback
retraced .44 of the X1-X2 move.

After three days of
consolidation, the eighth bar (C8) closed above the open, above the previous
day’s high, above the previous four closes and in the top 25% of its range. This
stock gave you multiple indications of a high-probability trade. The previous
day’s high was 131 1/8, so in your trading plan, you set entry at 131 1/4. The
next day you got a trade-through entry and BEAS traded as high as 138.

I tried to have you look
at the pullback trades through my eyes and thought process. You must cycle
through the daily charts every day to find these patterns. I suggest you start
looking at the high RS and EPS stocks that have closed in the top 25% of their
range and have had an increase in volume over the previous day.

The following charts
highlight the multiple patterns in Nokia that were in place at the same time we
took our entry in Nokia at 201.625.

The chart below of Nokia
(Figure 4) is a Three-Week
Symmetrical Triangle
with four defined points that is an excellent
pattern. Longer-term players might have waited for the break out around 206
before entering the trade.


Figure 4.  Nokia Daily Chart. 

The next chart of Nokia
(Figure 5)  illustrates an
Ascending Triangle
which is only because you prefer to look at it
that way. This is also a breakout that is just a touch above the symmetrical
triangle.


Figure 5.  Nokia Daily Chart. 

Another trader might
have looked at the Nokia chart and seen it as a Cup and
Handle
(Figure 6)
. The retracement down from the high was on
declining volume and it picked up a bit, forming the downward pullback handle.


Figure 6. Nokia Daily Chart. 

The next pattern
(Figure 7) is a strong favorite of mine because it
leads to explosive moves after a breakout of this
Dynamite Triangle.
The day preceding the breakout is usually a
narrow-range inside day with a stop right below the low of that day which gives
you a high-probability trade with excellent risk reward. Following the breakout,
you often get a good move from two to eight days.


Figure 7. Nokia Daily Chart. 

I hope you will benefit
from this Trading Lesson because profitable trading is, in essence, based on
price relationships that put you in high-probability situations.

Kevin Haggerty