Description

Book Synopsis
A timely update to the book on using the Market Profile method to trade Emerging over twenty years ago, Market Profile analysis continues to realize a strong following among active traders.

Table of Contents

Preface xiii

Acknowledgments xvii

Chapter 1 Introduction 1

Chapter 2 Novice 7

Laying the Foundation 9

The Auction 9

Organizing the Day 10

Challenging the Rules 15

The Role of the Marketplace 16

Going with the Crowd 17

Introduction to Day Timeframe Structure 19

Normal Day 19

Dynamics 19

Structural Characteristics 21

Normal Variation of a Normal Day 21

Dynamics 21

Structural Characteristics 23

Trend Day 23

Dynamics 23

Structural Characteristics 23

Double-Distribution Trend Day 25

Dynamics 25

Structural Characteristics 25

Nontrend Day 27

Dynamics 27

Structural Characteristics 27

Neutral Day 27

Dynamics 27

Structural Characteristics 28

Day Type Summary 31

Chapter 3 Advanced Beginner 33

Building the Framework 34

The Big Picture: Market Structure, Trading Logic, and Time 34

A Synthesis: Structure, Time, and Logic 35

Ease of Learning 36

Amount of Information 36

Recognition Speed 37

Trade Location 37

Confidence Level 37

Summary 38

Evaluating Other Timeframe Control 38

Other Timeframe Control on the Extremes 40

Tails (or Extremes) 40

Range Extension 40

Other Timeframe Control in the Body of the Profile 40

TPO 41

Initiative versus Responsive Activity 45

Trending versus Bracketed Markets 49

Key Elements—A Brief Discussion 51

Trending Markets 54

Bracketed Markets 54

The Two Big Questions 56

Chapter 4 Competent 59

Doing the Trade 59

Section I 60

Day Timeframe Trading 60

Day Timeframe Directional Conviction 61

Opening Call 61

The Open 62

The Open as a Gauge of Market Conviction 63

Open-Drive 63

Open-Test-Drive 65

Open-Rejection-Reverse 68

Open-Auction 69

Open-Auction in Range 70

Open-Auction out of Range 71

Summary 73

Opening’s Relationship to Previous

Day—Estimating Daily Range Potential 74

Open within Value—Acceptance 75

Rejection (Breakout) 79

Open outside of Value but within Range—Acceptance 80

Rejection (Breakout) 83

Open outside of Range—Acceptance 84

Rejection 85

Summary 85

April 13,1989 86

Crude Oil 87

S&P 500 87

Gold 90

Japanese Yen 92

Soybeans 92

Treasury Bonds 92

Summary 95

Day Timeframe Auction Rotations 96

Two-Timeframe Markets 97

One-Timeframe Markets 97

Using Auction Rotations to Evaluate Other Timeframe Control 97

Structure 99

Half-Hour Auctions 100

Extremes 100

Range Extension 101

Time 101

Identifying Timeframe Transition 102

December Swiss Franc, October 12, 1987 103

Y to E: One-Timeframe Buying 104

E: Time 104

Y to F: Auction Test 104

G: Transition Confirmation 104

E to H: One-Timeframe Selling 105

H: Auction Test 105

I: Transition Confirmation 105

H-J: One-Timeframe Buying 105

Summary 105

Auction Failures 105

Excess 110

Signs of Excess 111

The Rotation Factor 112

Monitoring the POC or Fairest Price 115

9:30 a.m. Figure 4.30 116

10:00 a.m. Figure 4.31 118

10:30 a.m. Figure 4.32 119

Noon Figure 4.33 119

2:00 p.m. Figure 4.34 119

The Close 120

Day Timeframe Visualization and Pattern Recognition 122

Short-Covering Rallies 123

Long-Liquidation Breaks 127

Summary of Short Covering and Long Liquidation 128

Ledges 129

Summary 130

High- and Low-Volume Areas 131

High-Volume Areas 131

Identifying High-Volume Levels 132

High-Volume Examples 134

Low-Volume Areas 138

Low-Volume Examples 140

Summary 144

Summary—Day Timeframe Trading 145

Section II 145

Long-Term Trading 145

Long-Term Directional Conviction 146

Attempted Direction: Which Way is the Market Trying to Go? 146

Auction Rotations 147

Range Extension 147

Long-Term Excess 150

Island Days 152

Long-Term Tails 152

Gaps 155

Summary 155

Buying/Selling Composite Days 155

Summary 157

Directional Performance: is the Market Doing a Good Job in its Attempts to Get There? 157

Volume 158

Evaluating Changes in Volume 158

Volume as a Measure of Directional Performance 158

Value-Area Placement 159

Evaluating Directional Performance through Combined Volume and Value-Area Placement 160

Value-Area Width 169

Summary: Long-Term Activity Record 171

Long-Term Auction Rotations 183

Brackets 183

Trade Location in a Bracketed Market 188

Rule 1: Monitor Market Direction and Location within the Current Bracket 189

Rule 2: Markets Generally Test the Bracket Extreme More Than Once 190

Rule 3: Markets Fluctuate within Bracketed Regions 190

Rule 4: Monitor Activity Near the Bracket Extremes for Acceptance/Rejection 192

Transition: Bracket to Trend 192

Trends 193

Trade Location in a Trending Market 193

Monitoring Trends for Continuation 196

Transition: Trend to Bracket 197

Detailed Analysis of a Developing Market 201

Bracket Reference Points 201

Region A (Figure 4.87) 203

Region B (Figure 4.88) 205

Region C (Figure 4.89) 207

Region D (Figure 4.90) 208

Long-Term Auction Failures 210

Long-Term Short Covering and Long Liquidation 214

Applications 224

Corrective Action 225

The Function of Corrective Action 226

Summary 228

Long-Term Profiles 228

Using Long-Term Profiles 229

The Long-Term Profile in Action 229

Region A (Figures 4.98 and 4.99) 231

Region B (Figures 4.100 and 4.101) 235

Summary 238

Special Situations 238

3 to I Days 239

Neutral-Extreme Days 241

The Value-Area Rule 244

Summary 246

Spikes 247

Acceptance versus Rejection 247

Openings within the Spike 247

Openings outside the Spike 249

Bullish Openings 249

Bearish Openings 252

Spike Reference Points 252

Balance-Area Breakouts 252

Gaps 260

Day Timeframe Significance of Gaps 260

Summary 265

Markets to Stay Out Of 265

Nontrend Days 266

Nonconviction Days 266

Long-Term Nontrend Markets 267

News-Influenced Markets 269

Summary 269

News 269

Summary 274

Beyond the Competent Trader 275

Chapter 5 Proficient 277

Self-Understanding: Becoming a Successful Trader 279

Self-Observation 281

The Whole-Brained Trader 282

The Left Hemisphere 283

The Right Hemisphere 283

Combining the Two Hemispheres 283

Strategy 284

A Business Strategy 285

Capital 285

Location 286

Timing 286

Information 287

Know Your Competition 287

Know Yourself 288

Consistent, Daily Execution 288

Inventory 288

Risk 289

Goals 290

Record Keeping and Performance 290

Dedication 290

Applications 291

Summary 292

Chapter 6 The Expert Trader 295

Chapter 7 Experience 297

Set Aside Your Expectations 297

Mind over Markets in Profile 298

Market-Understanding and Self-Understanding 300

Perfect Practice Makes Perfect 300

Blinded by Price 300

Be Prepared 301

Perspective 302

Overnight Inventory 305

Gaps Can Be Gold 307

Gaining an Edge 308

The Fairest Price Revealed 309

Thinking Statistically 311

The Trader’s Dilemma 311

The Most Important Omission from the First Printing in 1990 312

Emotional Markets 313

A Landscape View of the Market 314

Personal Evolution 315

Hierarchy of Information 316

Timeframe Control—Who is Dominating the Current Session? 317

Markets are Visual 318

Destination Trades 319

The Opening 319

Trends 320

Daily Perspective 322

Cognitive Dissonance 322

Imagination 325

False Certainty 326

Anomalies 326

Market Logic 328

We are All Day Traders 329

Appendix 1 Value-Area Calculation 331

Volume Value-Area Calculation 331

TPO Value-Area Calculation 332

Appendix II TPO versus Volume Profiles 335

Single Price Level Distortions 336

End of Day Total Volume versus Ongoing Volume throughout the Day 337

Anomalies 337

Too Focused on Volume 339

Conclusion 339

Suggested Readings 341

About the Authors 343

Index 345

Mind Over Markets

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    A Hardback by James F. Dalton, Eric T. Jones, Robert B. Dalton

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      View other formats and editions of Mind Over Markets by James F. Dalton

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 13/08/2013
      ISBN13: 9781118531730, 978-1118531730
      ISBN10: 1118531736

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A timely update to the book on using the Market Profile method to trade Emerging over twenty years ago, Market Profile analysis continues to realize a strong following among active traders.

      Table of Contents

      Preface xiii

      Acknowledgments xvii

      Chapter 1 Introduction 1

      Chapter 2 Novice 7

      Laying the Foundation 9

      The Auction 9

      Organizing the Day 10

      Challenging the Rules 15

      The Role of the Marketplace 16

      Going with the Crowd 17

      Introduction to Day Timeframe Structure 19

      Normal Day 19

      Dynamics 19

      Structural Characteristics 21

      Normal Variation of a Normal Day 21

      Dynamics 21

      Structural Characteristics 23

      Trend Day 23

      Dynamics 23

      Structural Characteristics 23

      Double-Distribution Trend Day 25

      Dynamics 25

      Structural Characteristics 25

      Nontrend Day 27

      Dynamics 27

      Structural Characteristics 27

      Neutral Day 27

      Dynamics 27

      Structural Characteristics 28

      Day Type Summary 31

      Chapter 3 Advanced Beginner 33

      Building the Framework 34

      The Big Picture: Market Structure, Trading Logic, and Time 34

      A Synthesis: Structure, Time, and Logic 35

      Ease of Learning 36

      Amount of Information 36

      Recognition Speed 37

      Trade Location 37

      Confidence Level 37

      Summary 38

      Evaluating Other Timeframe Control 38

      Other Timeframe Control on the Extremes 40

      Tails (or Extremes) 40

      Range Extension 40

      Other Timeframe Control in the Body of the Profile 40

      TPO 41

      Initiative versus Responsive Activity 45

      Trending versus Bracketed Markets 49

      Key Elements—A Brief Discussion 51

      Trending Markets 54

      Bracketed Markets 54

      The Two Big Questions 56

      Chapter 4 Competent 59

      Doing the Trade 59

      Section I 60

      Day Timeframe Trading 60

      Day Timeframe Directional Conviction 61

      Opening Call 61

      The Open 62

      The Open as a Gauge of Market Conviction 63

      Open-Drive 63

      Open-Test-Drive 65

      Open-Rejection-Reverse 68

      Open-Auction 69

      Open-Auction in Range 70

      Open-Auction out of Range 71

      Summary 73

      Opening’s Relationship to Previous

      Day—Estimating Daily Range Potential 74

      Open within Value—Acceptance 75

      Rejection (Breakout) 79

      Open outside of Value but within Range—Acceptance 80

      Rejection (Breakout) 83

      Open outside of Range—Acceptance 84

      Rejection 85

      Summary 85

      April 13,1989 86

      Crude Oil 87

      S&P 500 87

      Gold 90

      Japanese Yen 92

      Soybeans 92

      Treasury Bonds 92

      Summary 95

      Day Timeframe Auction Rotations 96

      Two-Timeframe Markets 97

      One-Timeframe Markets 97

      Using Auction Rotations to Evaluate Other Timeframe Control 97

      Structure 99

      Half-Hour Auctions 100

      Extremes 100

      Range Extension 101

      Time 101

      Identifying Timeframe Transition 102

      December Swiss Franc, October 12, 1987 103

      Y to E: One-Timeframe Buying 104

      E: Time 104

      Y to F: Auction Test 104

      G: Transition Confirmation 104

      E to H: One-Timeframe Selling 105

      H: Auction Test 105

      I: Transition Confirmation 105

      H-J: One-Timeframe Buying 105

      Summary 105

      Auction Failures 105

      Excess 110

      Signs of Excess 111

      The Rotation Factor 112

      Monitoring the POC or Fairest Price 115

      9:30 a.m. Figure 4.30 116

      10:00 a.m. Figure 4.31 118

      10:30 a.m. Figure 4.32 119

      Noon Figure 4.33 119

      2:00 p.m. Figure 4.34 119

      The Close 120

      Day Timeframe Visualization and Pattern Recognition 122

      Short-Covering Rallies 123

      Long-Liquidation Breaks 127

      Summary of Short Covering and Long Liquidation 128

      Ledges 129

      Summary 130

      High- and Low-Volume Areas 131

      High-Volume Areas 131

      Identifying High-Volume Levels 132

      High-Volume Examples 134

      Low-Volume Areas 138

      Low-Volume Examples 140

      Summary 144

      Summary—Day Timeframe Trading 145

      Section II 145

      Long-Term Trading 145

      Long-Term Directional Conviction 146

      Attempted Direction: Which Way is the Market Trying to Go? 146

      Auction Rotations 147

      Range Extension 147

      Long-Term Excess 150

      Island Days 152

      Long-Term Tails 152

      Gaps 155

      Summary 155

      Buying/Selling Composite Days 155

      Summary 157

      Directional Performance: is the Market Doing a Good Job in its Attempts to Get There? 157

      Volume 158

      Evaluating Changes in Volume 158

      Volume as a Measure of Directional Performance 158

      Value-Area Placement 159

      Evaluating Directional Performance through Combined Volume and Value-Area Placement 160

      Value-Area Width 169

      Summary: Long-Term Activity Record 171

      Long-Term Auction Rotations 183

      Brackets 183

      Trade Location in a Bracketed Market 188

      Rule 1: Monitor Market Direction and Location within the Current Bracket 189

      Rule 2: Markets Generally Test the Bracket Extreme More Than Once 190

      Rule 3: Markets Fluctuate within Bracketed Regions 190

      Rule 4: Monitor Activity Near the Bracket Extremes for Acceptance/Rejection 192

      Transition: Bracket to Trend 192

      Trends 193

      Trade Location in a Trending Market 193

      Monitoring Trends for Continuation 196

      Transition: Trend to Bracket 197

      Detailed Analysis of a Developing Market 201

      Bracket Reference Points 201

      Region A (Figure 4.87) 203

      Region B (Figure 4.88) 205

      Region C (Figure 4.89) 207

      Region D (Figure 4.90) 208

      Long-Term Auction Failures 210

      Long-Term Short Covering and Long Liquidation 214

      Applications 224

      Corrective Action 225

      The Function of Corrective Action 226

      Summary 228

      Long-Term Profiles 228

      Using Long-Term Profiles 229

      The Long-Term Profile in Action 229

      Region A (Figures 4.98 and 4.99) 231

      Region B (Figures 4.100 and 4.101) 235

      Summary 238

      Special Situations 238

      3 to I Days 239

      Neutral-Extreme Days 241

      The Value-Area Rule 244

      Summary 246

      Spikes 247

      Acceptance versus Rejection 247

      Openings within the Spike 247

      Openings outside the Spike 249

      Bullish Openings 249

      Bearish Openings 252

      Spike Reference Points 252

      Balance-Area Breakouts 252

      Gaps 260

      Day Timeframe Significance of Gaps 260

      Summary 265

      Markets to Stay Out Of 265

      Nontrend Days 266

      Nonconviction Days 266

      Long-Term Nontrend Markets 267

      News-Influenced Markets 269

      Summary 269

      News 269

      Summary 274

      Beyond the Competent Trader 275

      Chapter 5 Proficient 277

      Self-Understanding: Becoming a Successful Trader 279

      Self-Observation 281

      The Whole-Brained Trader 282

      The Left Hemisphere 283

      The Right Hemisphere 283

      Combining the Two Hemispheres 283

      Strategy 284

      A Business Strategy 285

      Capital 285

      Location 286

      Timing 286

      Information 287

      Know Your Competition 287

      Know Yourself 288

      Consistent, Daily Execution 288

      Inventory 288

      Risk 289

      Goals 290

      Record Keeping and Performance 290

      Dedication 290

      Applications 291

      Summary 292

      Chapter 6 The Expert Trader 295

      Chapter 7 Experience 297

      Set Aside Your Expectations 297

      Mind over Markets in Profile 298

      Market-Understanding and Self-Understanding 300

      Perfect Practice Makes Perfect 300

      Blinded by Price 300

      Be Prepared 301

      Perspective 302

      Overnight Inventory 305

      Gaps Can Be Gold 307

      Gaining an Edge 308

      The Fairest Price Revealed 309

      Thinking Statistically 311

      The Trader’s Dilemma 311

      The Most Important Omission from the First Printing in 1990 312

      Emotional Markets 313

      A Landscape View of the Market 314

      Personal Evolution 315

      Hierarchy of Information 316

      Timeframe Control—Who is Dominating the Current Session? 317

      Markets are Visual 318

      Destination Trades 319

      The Opening 319

      Trends 320

      Daily Perspective 322

      Cognitive Dissonance 322

      Imagination 325

      False Certainty 326

      Anomalies 326

      Market Logic 328

      We are All Day Traders 329

      Appendix 1 Value-Area Calculation 331

      Volume Value-Area Calculation 331

      TPO Value-Area Calculation 332

      Appendix II TPO versus Volume Profiles 335

      Single Price Level Distortions 336

      End of Day Total Volume versus Ongoing Volume throughout the Day 337

      Anomalies 337

      Too Focused on Volume 339

      Conclusion 339

      Suggested Readings 341

      About the Authors 343

      Index 345

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