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there'll be a pullback, just don't guess it when and where, the market will show us then we just follow, simple as that.grachu wrote:cobra if all major players are expecting a pullback would not that INVALIDATE one ?
taggard wrote:---------L_T wrote:What do you think of Al Brooks' new three books compared to the one older one? I've been looking for someone who has read the old and new to see if all three of the new are worth picking up.
Can you share any of the details of the types of breakouts you take? Just curious.![]()
hiram wrote:good morning cobra
your last couple nights reports are in my opinion are each worth the 120 i paid you for the year! between your daily dose of wisdom and als three new books my home grown strategy of intraday trading spy breakouts via options has put me in the mid 4 figures for my year to date return using my standard 10k position. i dont post much but i read everyday and if work doesnt allow me to follow post by post i always make sure to replay the market using ninja trader as i read the live posts, this also lets me score other posters effectiveness from a call standpoint. to sum up for anyone reading this post paying the 10 mthly or 120 yearly is in my opinion the best value anywhere on the internet.
Thanks Cobra I appreciate your hard work!
P.S i also owe huge props to bullbear Al Cougar and 99 for unknowingly assisting in my tradeing education.
only my opinion--the first book has everything you need if you spend a lot of time with it due to the simplicity of the method. generally you can make a very simple inclusive statement--but it requires the listener to either have a great deal of understanding--or be willing to put much concentration into that simple thing. or you can make a long series of exclusive statements and in theory the listener is slowly drawn though the data and learns.
the glitch is the more you explain--the harder the reader has to work to get back to the original meaning that the whole explanation started from. or the the less you explain the statement the more the student has to struggle to grasp what is contained in the simple statement. in both cases the student should be careful to consider the possible pitfall and err in the direction of overdoing it in the direction he chooses (eg simple idea more thought and work--complex idea more effort to grasp the root meaning)
in this context if you look at what al is saying--at it's essence it is
(1) "every price bar tells a story or has meaning" (this is it in a one sentence nutshell the problem is the idea is too compact for people to grasp)
(2) "groups of price bars have meaning"
(3) "with proper understanding of 1 and 2 you can in effect "understand the market in every moment it is open using nothing but a 5 min chart with a 20 ema on it".
(4) cut down the number of trades and scale size of trade as you get better
Optional stuff that al notes but for one reason or another doesn't always do.
(4) the best thing to do is find a trend and get in fast if it is a fast trend--or buy a pull back if it is a slower trend. (he scalps too)
(5) pick only optimal trades (eg strong trends) (he takes lots of trades)
(6) stick with one time frame and spx futs (he buys some stocks and different time frames)
Key considerations (to me)
(1) if al likes to be in the market alot--is this picking the best trades?
(2) what mental processes does the student need to apply to actually do this 5 min stuff day in and out and stay focused in the right areas. (what does the student need to do to concentrate that is not taught in the book)
(3) is the point of trading to make money or to have fun
(4) how much time is trading worth given our short time on the planet
what i am trying to say is "don't get lost in a forest of ideas explained in insane detail for 1500 pages and forget al's real brillance--every price bar and every group is telling a story if you listen. "looking for something (eg chart pattern etc) is not the same as looking at something." when we look for something--even as subtle and cool as some of als more amusing 1-5 price bar patterns are--we fail to see everything else. we need at all costs to look at what is going on not what we want to go on or what we learned should go on.
another way to say this is "listening is not the same as thinking"
I was too busy thinking about too many things one after another. He said that when we talk to ourselves without listening carefully we usually are not aware of preoccupations or obsessions that separate us from someone or something.
LISTENING. . .IS DIFFERENT THAN THINKING BECAUSE IT IS MORE REFLECTIVE MORE OBSERVANT
good luck with your trading
thank you al--consider the coke bottle guy--and the reaction to him by everyone in the trading room. personally for me this was the essence of the book coupled with the adversity part--intent is all. the problem is to put yourself in that room as one of those guys and actually be the guy who checks out the "weird concept". what's amazing is nobody looked--if you are looking at nutty stuff that has to be bogus--you have to be heading in the right direction.Al_Dente wrote:PAGING TAGGARD
What is the title of the first Brooks book?
thanks
PS: I luved Dancing w Lions, esp the “find the losers” concept (and more).
Am still working on other homework u gave me (eg: eliminate everything not essential to goal, that’s taking me a while….)
THANKS AGAIN
It's my understanding that the HFT machines (the ones directly hooked up to the quote systems where there is no latency) see the entire "deck". It's not hypothetical to state that the divulging of orders could be charged as a felony as well as involve RICO laws. We have decided to overlook that fact because the principal reason for any exchange's existence is to make itself, and its owners/members money. The public does not enter into that equation as to their being treated fairly.1der wrote:SWalsh:
Your various posts re: the monitoring and insight into what traders are doing is something I have sensed for many years now.
With the advent of on-line/real-time trading, the "house" knows exactly what cards I am holding, what I am contemplating (cued up trade but not yet entered), and with enough time they will know my trading patterns/strengths/weaknesses. I believe it would take very little effort to aggregate all that info from across all their traders, into a meaningful tool for ease of manipulation.
It Is rigged, I know that and trade accordingly.
nice, good c/p ratio on vxx/uup as well.BullBear52x wrote:Financial or banking? XLF, BAC, and C here. all under 5 dma
Thanks Taggart for your insight with Al Brooks' style of trading. I've gone through one of Al's presentations and summarized it in my blog below. It's a gist of what Al Brooks is all about in the context of his first book. I thought it's relevant here and may help someone get up to speed. http://goo.gl/38Es9taggard wrote:ADD ON--
for thinking and listening--consider cobra's use of measured moves. i like them and have used the idea for years. al makes the point they are minor in importance and not that big a deal. in terms of thinking a measured move is a conceptual overlay that attempts to predict future action. that would be thinking in the thinking listening model. next consider cobra's frequent use of volume spikes on exhaustion bars--this would be listening. the difference is that when cobra or anyone refers to a measured move it is not real--it is only a likely outcome. when cobra or anyone refers to a price bar that is real. thinking is an abstraction that can be useful but is not real in the same way the thing being thought about is.
the danger for the student is confusing them--everyone focuses on targets projections and so on--this is fine as long as it does not distract or weaken our really powerful skill--listening feeling and seeing actual action.
power is seeing a trend and jumping on it--not approximating the outcome of the event prior to it's occurrence. often to the beginner the inverse appears true. as long as we always remember this it's ok to do all the thinking we like. but al's real contribution is all based on the idea of listening to the action and then entering in an exact way. For the beginner memorizing all the exact entries is interesting and a good exercise--but only if the idea of focusing on solid trends ASAP is not lost in the process.
sorry if all this seems pushy--but there are many posts here with conceptual targets to every 1 post of real listening--this is not in any way a criticism of conceptual targets--it's just pushing the essence which is listening to the action.
good luck everyone
pidge66 wrote:taggard wrote:ADD ON--
for thinking and listening--consider cobra's use of measured moves. i like them and have used the idea for years. al makes the point they are minor in importance and not that big a deal. in terms of thinking a measured move is a conceptual overlay that attempts to predict future action. that would be thinking in the thinking listening model. next consider cobra's frequent use of volume spikes on exhaustion bars--this would be listening. the difference is that when cobra or anyone refers to a measured move it is not real--it is only a likely outcome. when cobra or anyone refers to a price bar that is real. thinking is an abstraction that can be useful but is not real in the same way the thing being thought about is.
the danger for the student is confusing them--everyone focuses on targets projections and so on--this is fine as long as it does not distract or weaken our really powerful skill--listening feeling and seeing actual action.
power is seeing a trend and jumping on it--not approximating the outcome of the event prior to it's occurrence. often to the beginner the inverse appears true. as long as we always remember this it's ok to do all the thinking we like. but al's real contribution is all based on the idea of listening to the action and then entering in an exact way. For the beginner memorizing all the exact entries is interesting and a good exercise--but only if the idea of focusing on solid trends ASAP is not lost in the process.
sorry if all this seems pushy--but there are many posts here with conceptual targets to every 1 post of real listening--this is not in any way a criticism of conceptual targets--it's just pushing the essence which is listening to the action.
good luck everyone
NICE STUFF
i would only add that in the first book he cautions constantly about using esp 1 min charts--and to a lesser degree 3 min charts. personally i use 5 15 and look at a day chart a few times (that is my concern is more losing the larger picture than getting even more granular. maybe he has changed a bit on the 1-3 min stuff. another view of this granular is if i am trading a scalp that stuff is more useful--if i am trying to trend it's less useful. my personal problem is losing half the trend and getting out early. Finally beginners are often trashed by cognitive difference introduced by using multiple time frames--after some experience the situation could be inverse. so i would push only the 5min chart for say a year--or 200 trades and then scale up or down as the trader likes (only an personal opinion)
Thanks Taggart for your insight with Al Brooks' style of trading. I've gone through one of Al's presentations and summarized it in my blog below. It's a gist of what Al Brooks is all about in the context of his first book. I thought it's relevant here and may help someone get up to speed. http://goo.gl/38Es9