Preface to all five parts: As of Friday’s close, I had fifty open short positions. I have broken these into five equal groups; here is this set:

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Preface to all five parts: As of Friday’s close, I had fifty open short positions. I have broken these into five equal groups; here is this set:

ATR is a tool in every charting program (including SlopeCharts) that will calculate the most recent average true range of price based from the past 14 time intervals. When transitioning from calm to volatile market conditions, ATR will expand with price volatility. And conversely, it will contract during periods of price contraction.
You can go into the setting of the ATR and increase or decrease its length. I tend to visually look back twenty to 30 intervals manually, (by eye), yet set the ATR to the length 14 intervals. Consider this measure as a tool to measure a decent second target. A 14 interval ATR is specifically based on the interest in a healthy second target in anticipation of price volatility. Yet if price is contracting for more than 14 intervals and about to break out, length 14 will not reflect the most optimal second target price. That is why your eye looks to the left to recognize price potential. At some point, hopefully, you will learn that ATR is similar to training wheels when learning to ride a bike.
(more…)Preface to all five parts: As of Friday’s close, I had fifty open short positions. I have broken these into five equal groups; here is this set:

Here is a clip from almost a decade ago of Louis CK sharing some memories of his struggles and how Carlin helped make him who he is. It’s a shame that both parties in question have, in some way, vanished (Carlin through death and Louis through scandal). I still find this profoundly touching:
As usual, on Labor Day, I am at labor. And, joyfully so, because I love my Slope, and I love my Slopers. And I am delighted to roll out to you the very last feature from the dearly-departed former creation of mine, ProphetCharts, which I had always wanted to also have in SlopeCharts: labels.
Good organization is a way to keep your trading world well-managed and opportunistic. SlopeCharts was built to appeal to well-ordered, well-organized traders, and there are multiple ways to assemble, gather, and annotate both tickers and charts with information that will help you toward this goal.
One vitally important method is Labels: that is, the ability to create, in an ad hoc fashion, and apply any labels you see fit to any particular ticker symbol. Several things should be noted about this feature:
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