Range Break & Pullbacks: Trade Ideas Professionals
Range Break & Pullbacks: Trade Ideas Professionals
Table of Contents
RANGE BREAK
& PULLBACKS
01
CHAPTER
02
CHAPTER
INTRODUCTION
For this reason, we have decided to make the concepts of our latest Trade
Ideas eBooks focused on our favorite swing trading setups here at Trade
Ideas. Steve, Andy, Sean, Jamie, Michael and Barrie have each dedicated
a chapter in this series of eBooks to spell out their favorite swing trading
setup and why.
We hope you enjoy this diverse approach to sharing some specific ideas
and methods for swing trading time frames. Some of the chapters will
even include the Trade Ideas scan configuration cloud link for you to
download and use yourself. Enjoy!
5 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 01
CHAPTER 01
BUYING STRONG
STOCKS ON PULLBACK
compiled by Andy Lindloff
When it comes to swing trading, I’m not one who likes to chase 52 week
highs, unless it’s a major range break and I’m able to catch it early. I
prefer buying strong stocks on pullbacks after the selling has potentially
subsided. The ideal situation for me is a stock that has recently hit a
6 month to year high, then a pullback on the 5 day time frame, price
is above the 50 day SMA, and then puts out a bullish daily setup bar
(described below). One thing I love about Trade Ideas is if you can imagine
a chart pattern in your head, in most cases you can build a scan to
generate ideas based on the pattern with our “Position in Range” filters.
When looking at ranges, the low of the range is 0% and the high of the
range is 100%. The key filters in this configuration are:
This will become more clear as we look at the Top List Window and a chart.
Top Lists are great for doing homework because stocks will freeze in the
window at the close of the day. There is no alert in a Top List. It only has
filters, and any stocks that satisfies all the filters in the configuration will
appear in the Top LIst window.
You can see that the stock symbol ALLY (pg.7) appeared in this Top List at
the end of the trading day on 5/9/2019.
Now, let’s take a look at the daily chart of the stock ALLY (below):
9 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 01
As you can see from the ALLY chart on the previous page, all of the filters
were satisfied. The price has pulled back and is in the lower 25% of its 5
day range, its above the 50-day SMA, and tried to sell off more on 5/9.
But, buyers came in and pushed it higher to close in the upper 25% of the
intraday range, thus forming the setup bar.
The theory behind this strategy is not to buy it on the day of the setup
bar. Ideally, you would like to see the price action trade above the high
of the setup bar the following day, and that would be the trigger to buy
(although be careful about buying in the first 15 min of trading the next
day). The price has a much better chance of reversing for swing trade
once it trades above the setup bar’s high. The entry is the most important
part of a trade, and this has the potential to be a great entry. Now that
we know we have a good entry, the rest is just managing risk. Every trade
needs to have a stop price and it needs to be defined the moment you
enter the trade. In this strategy, I like to use a print below the low of the
setup bar as the stop. In this example it happens to line up with the “swing
exit” generated by Trade Ideas software. Obviously this is subjective, and
depends on other variables such as trade size, holding time, and
risk tolerance.
10 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 01
What I really like about this strategy is that the entry price and stop
price is defined, taking away a lot of the guess work that you will find in
many trading strategies. The way I like to trade this strategy is to do my
homework the night before and place price alerts on the patterns I really
like just above the high of the setup bar. If it triggers the next day, I will
of course always gauge the current market conditions and other variables
that may influence the trade. Also, I will seldom take a trade in the first
15 min to avoid head-fakes. Keep in mind that this is a swing trade, so
paying a little higher price is better than getting whiplashed by early algo
price action.
CHAPTER 02
BUYING STOCKS AT
ALL TIME HIGHS (ATH)
& SHORTING STOCKS AT
ALL TIME LOWS (ATL)
compiled by Jamie Hodge
In our previous book (5 Ways to Win in a Post BTFD Market), I discussed the
Intraday Range Break, otherwise known as an ORB (Opening Range Break).
In this book, we’re going to take it one step further and apply the same
methodology but with a new twist—playing the ORB on stocks that are at
Lifetime Highs or Lifetime lows.
When we trade an ORB for a stock that is “Range Bound” on the daily—not
at all time highs (ATH) or all time lows (ATL)—we typically look to the left
in order to try and determine how much ‘room’ we may have if the stock
moves in our direction. In other words, if we’re long, how much room is
there before the stock hits potential resistance? If we’re short, how much
downside ‘room’ might there be before we encounter potential support?
12 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 02
Daily, at ATH
14 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 02
I’ve included intraday risk on the 15 minute chart because some traders
out there will only swing things that they are profitable heading into the
close. Which swing exit you end up selecting may be different depending
on your risk tolerance. I’ll review the 2 different risk options at the end
of the chapter. This methodology also gives us the potential to meld the
two techniques of intraday and swing trading—in essence creating a
hybrid. We key our entry off of the intraday strength, and assuming the
trade remains strong into the close, we’re starting with much greater
momentum entering the swing phase.
15 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 02
Intraday Setup
Just like the upside version, being short with no apparent support
is a good thing assuming proper risk management and acceptable
risk on the intraday. With some good timing and patience, there are
some trades where you have the potential to be nicely in the money
while the new range materializes. Remember, every trade starts out as a
day trade, whether we swing it or not is based on different factors.
17 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 02
Now, for the Alert windows that will help us identify these types of
opportunities. I’ll be including 2 of my favorite windows that I’ve built for
this specific task, Turbo Up and Turbo Down.
CLOUD LINK
CLOUD LINK
18 Trade Ideas | The Setup
Chapter 02
A: You can use the Trade-Ideas ‘Swing Exit’ or Prior resistance, which now
has the potential as acting as future support.