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-   -   The Trend (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=398296)

eastbay 12-14-2005 12:36 PM

The Trend
 
This is 2+2. We ought to be able to do a lot better than most trading forums where people, for some reason, spend all day discussing psychobabble mumbo-jumbo and subjective, pseudo-mystical claptrap.

Let's start with the recent remarks about "the trend" and "trend following."

What is "the trend" and how does one "follow" it? I'm not looking for hand-waving here, I'm looking for testable, quantitative, repeatable measures for finding "the trend" and testable, quantitative, repeatable methods for "following" it.

Any of you trend followers want to start?

eastbay

PS Yes, I've read all the standard books which manage to say almost nothing in hundreds of pages.

blendedsuit 12-14-2005 12:53 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]

PS Yes, I've read all the standard books which manage to say almost nothing in hundreds of pages.

[/ QUOTE ]
kinda like your post. Do you have some sort of example? For instance, stocks tend to rise more in January than any other month.

Sniper 12-14-2005 01:22 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
What is "the trend" and how does one "follow" it? I'm not looking for hand-waving here, I'm looking for testable, quantitative, repeatable measures for finding "the trend" and testable, quantitative, repeatable methods for "following" it.

Any of you trend followers want to start?


[/ QUOTE ]

Some hands involved, but its mostly an "eye" thing! [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]

I'll start with the basics (excerpted from Charting by Michael "Tiny" Saul)...

The general direction of a stock's price movement over a period of time is called a trend.

If the price is moving up over time, then it is in an uptrend.
If the price is moving down, then it is in a downtrend.
And, if the price is essentially moving sideways, it is said to be in a range, or rangebound.

One of the main principles of price action is that a trend has a much greater likelihood of continuing than reversing.

Although, a directional up- or down-trending market will eventually lead to a rangebound market, and a rangebound market will eventually lead to a directional trending market, you can't always predict the precise timing of the change.

So, the goal is to recognize the current trend and use an applicable trading strategy.

If you are in an uptrend, look to buy the price pullbacks.
If you are in a downtrend, look to sell the rallies.
In a rangebound market, look to buy the low end of the range and sell the high end of the range.

While you can trade either, it's better to trade a directional trending market, since the moves tend to be larger.

Some statistics...
70% of the markets moves occur in only 20% of the time.
The market tends to stay rangebound 80-85% of the time.
The market tends to move directionally 15-20% of the time.

Make sure to use the right charts for the type of trading you are doing, as the short, intermediate, and long term trend outlook may be different. Chart suggestion...
Scalping: 1 minute
Daytrading: 5 minute
Swing Trading: Hourly
Intermediate: Daily
Investing: Weekly

You should also look at the chart one time period up from the chart you base your trading on.

mrbaseball 12-14-2005 01:35 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
What is "the trend" and how does one "follow" it?

[/ QUOTE ]

Sniper's response was great. This is how I use it and trade with it. I look at 3 charts (timeframes) of whatever I am trading. Usually 5 minute, 30 minute, and 60 minute.

I also use a moving average crossover. If the fast average is above the slow average on all 3 timeframes I consider it an uptrend and if fast is a below on all 3 a downtrend. I then make a trend following trade when the price rallies or dips to the slow average (on shortest chart usually 5 minutes). Obviously I use other things as well, such as trend lines and support/resistance for trade entries. But when I have met the condition of a trend on all 3 time frames and the price moves to the slow average on the short timeframe chart I am looking to enter the market in the direction of the trend.

Sniper 12-14-2005 01:39 PM

Re: The Trend
 
Trader Vic defines trends as follows...

An uptrend is a price movement consisting of a series of higher highs and higher lows.

A downtrend is a price movement consisting of a series of lower lows and lower highs.

buffett 12-14-2005 01:58 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
Investing: Weekly

[/ QUOTE ]
Whose terminology is this....Tiny's or Sniper's?

Sniper 12-14-2005 02:12 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Investing: Weekly

[/ QUOTE ]
Whose terminology is this....Tiny's or Sniper's?

[/ QUOTE ]

Its Tiny's...

My own words, to elaborate, a Long Term Trend follower should use a weekly chart to identify the trend direction and a monthly chart for a bigger picture outlook.

eastbay 12-14-2005 09:22 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
What is "the trend" and how does one "follow" it? I'm not looking for hand-waving here, I'm looking for testable, quantitative, repeatable measures for finding "the trend" and testable, quantitative, repeatable methods for "following" it.

Any of you trend followers want to start?


[/ QUOTE ]

Some hands involved, but its mostly an "eye" thing! [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]


[/ QUOTE ]

Ok, now that we've gotten the hand-waving out of the way, let's get down to the real business of defining a trend.

What I am after is a quantitative, testable definition of a trend. The reason for this is that this is the only way to do a legitimate experiment to see if "following" (to be defined next) said trend is in fact profitable over the long term, in a verifiable way, not "so-and-so said he does it and can show you his audited statements" or "I do this every day and make a living at it" or other such assertions which are not independently verifiable.

The closest thing you provided to a workable definition is:

"If the price is moving up over time, then it is in an uptrend" and vice-versa.

But that's a pretty imprecise definition. How much time? How consistently up? Monotonically up, or just more up than down, or simply up overall?

So the first question is: how do we select "uptrend" data given a price stream in arbitrary time and price units?

Is 9,10,11 (say N-min bar closes) an uptrend? Why or why not?
Is 9,8,10,11 an uptrend? Why or why not?
How about 9,8,12,11,13?

What is the actual criteria that separates uptrend from non-uptrend?

eastbay

eastbay 12-14-2005 09:27 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
Trader Vic defines trends as follows...

An uptrend is a price movement consisting of a series of higher highs and higher lows.


[/ QUOTE ]

What is a "high"? A maximum over what time interval?

How many is a "series"? Can there be movement in that series which is not up, or does it have to be all up? The latter would seem to be an absurdity, as at some timescale there will always be fluctuation, and you would never have this "uptrend" condition.

So once we figure out what a "high" is (by defining an interval over which to take a maximum), how many lower highs can there be in this "series" before it is not an uptrend?

eastbay

mrbaseball 12-14-2005 10:02 PM

Re: The Trend
 
[ QUOTE ]
What is the actual criteria that separates uptrend from non-uptrend?


[/ QUOTE ]

It depends? What is your timeframe? As Sniper showed there are several different timeframes you can consider and each timeframe can have a different trend going. I tend to trade short term by daytrading and scalping so I look at shorter timeframes. I couldn't care less what the monthly or weekly is doing and I'm typically only minorly interested in what the daily is doing with much more concern about interday trends.

If you want to test things (which it seems) I find moving averages as the best trend identifiers. Use a crossover or a longer term MA (ie 200 bars). If you are above it,it's an uptrend and below it a downtrend. Then do whatever testing you feel needs to be done.

But this type of trading is more of an artform than a science. There is no magic formula.


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