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TraderAide.com
The Trader's Assistant
Swing Trading
by Jim Wyckoff
www.jimwyckoff.com

March 8, Mar 08, 2002-  "The Trend is Your Friend" is a tried and true market adage that is indeed one of the most valuable futures trading tenets. However, history shows that most markets tend to move in a non-trending, or "sideways" fashion more of the time than they are in a trending mode. There are several methods by which to trade non-trending markets. One popular method is called "swing trading."

The basic principle for swing trading is finding a market that is trapped in a
sideways trading range (also called a congestion area), or in an up- trending or
down-trending channel on the chart. On the chart, the trader must be able to
distinguish some clear support and resistance levels that are boundaries of the
congestion area or channel. When a market price approaches the support or
resistance area boundary, the trader will establish a position: long if prices
are moving lower and close to the support boundary, and short if prices are 
moving higher and toward the resistance boundary.

Swing trading techniques can be used in any chart time frame -- daily, weekly,
monthly and intra-day charts. However, the most popular timeframe for swing
trading is the daily bar chart.

It's important to note that the strength of the support and resistance at the
boundaries is usually determined by the number of times the market has pivoted
at the boundaries. The more times a market has reached a support or resistance
boundary, and then reversed course, the more powerful is that boundary. Thus, a
trader wants to find a well-established channel or trading range for which to
attempt to swing trade. An exception to this is a market that has been in a
trading range, but is bound by one or two powerful spike moves, which also
indicate a strong support or resistance boundary. In other words, some
congestion areas that may offer a good swing-trade opportunity do not require
several pivot points. Instead, those one or two spike levels would be determined
to be a potentially good pivot area for a market.

The swing trader should still use tight protective stops. A good area to place a
protective stop is just outside of a support or resistance boundary that makes
up the trading channel or congestion area. For example, if a market in a trading
channel is nearing the upper boundary of that channel, the swing trader would
establish a short position and would want to place his protective buy stop just
above the resistance level that serves as the upper boundary of the trading
channel.

Interestingly, if the market keeps moving higher and breaks out above the
channel, or congestion area, (stopping the swing trader out of the market) then
that would likely be considered an upside "breakout," which is a favorite
trading set-up among many veteran position traders. This set-up would suggest
establishing a long position if there was good follow-through buying strength
the following session after the upside breakout from the congestion area or
channel. The trader establishing the long position would place his protective
sell stop just below the former upper boundary of the trading channel or
congestion area that was just penetrated on the upside.

--- Jim Wyckoff is the proprietor of the analytical, educational and trading
advisory service, "Jim Wyckoff on the Markets." He has a website at
www.jimwyckoff.com and his email address is jim@jimwyckoff.com.
(Ph. 319-277-8643)
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