Frequency Modulation

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I am back in Palo Alto, having been away in the mountains for the past week. I would like to say it was a relaxing and enjoyable vacation, but it wasn't – – not because I didn't enjoy the skiing and time with my family, but because my mind was haunted by the topic I'm going to discuss below.

On January 19th, my portfolio had reached a nadir for the year (down about 2%). Over the next 13 trading sessions, little by little, I completely turned that around, and by February 5th, my portfolio was at a new high. I felt fantastic, and I had just had the biggest cash gain intraday of my entire life.

In the subsequent nine sessions, by February 19th, I was right back to where I was before. From the 19th to the 19th, I had come full circle.

I worked very, very hard to get absolutely nowhere. Worse than that is the knowledge that, had I simply covered everything on the 5th, I frankly could have taken the rest of the month off, doing absolutely no trading, and been in great shape. But instead, I face the same challenge, all the while equipped with the same knowledge of what the market is going to do next that all of us have (which is: no knowledge at all).

Now, the whole woulda/shoulda/coulda thing is the hallmark of amateurs, and I rarely indulge in it. The simple truth is that, the entire time, I followed my rules and I acted rationally. On February 5th, none of us knew what was next. What if, on the 5th, I had indulged myself in profit taking, covered everything, and the market plunged 10% the following Monday? I would have been furious with myself, because I would have blatantly broken all the rules of discipline that I choose to follow. That would have been a far worse error.

Still, it stings. I don't like busting my butt for nothing, and the problem I'm facing is one of frequency. That is, I'm at my best as a swing trader (metaphorically represented by the lower portion of the image below), whereas the market is currently behaving optimally for day traders (represented by the top portion of the image). I am badly "out of phase" with the market's speed right now.

0219-waves 

 
So what do I do about this? Become a day trader? No; I think that would be reckless on my part. I suppose I could try to augment my present trading with elements of a few large positions that are more in tune with a day trader's market. But in my heart I think what I need the most of right now is patience. Past experience has shown me that, in the end, technical analysis works, and as frustrating as the market's recent gyrations have been, I believe that utterly changing how I trade would be little different than trading randomly.

Just to add to my gloom, I think bears still have about 20 points on the ES points "at risk"; the wall of resistance is much stronger at about 1125 than it is at the present 1105.

0219-es 

But, for me, it all returns to the chart below of the Russell 2000. I've been trading for a long time, and I've never seen a chart like this before. In my opinion, it spells one thing for market: doomed. And I am fervently hopeful that all my hard work and discipline will finally pay off when what I surmise will materialize finally comes to fruition.

0220-russell