TRADING TECHNIQUES

Pay Attention To Understand Your Market
Daytrading With Market Value

by Donald L. Jones


  Markets are complex, self-regulating, and driven by feedback. The message is clear: Decipher the feedback to understand your market.

How can you understand the market? With feedback. What is feedback? Feedback is market response. For instance, heavy demand leads to increased market activity; feedback is apparent as more ticks, more volume, increased volatility, and higher prices. You already know this, but how can you interpret this data?

Most technical indicators are not adequately coupled to the market because markets are dynamic and changing. Decoding feedback requires a market-attuned approach, something flexible enough to keep up with changes in the feedback itself. An important characteristic of feedback is that it takes time to develop a signal. A market acts, for example, and price jumps. All traders receive the information at about the same time. You consider the new information and then react to it in your own way at your own pace, and other traders do the same. The sum of all traders' actions creates the total feedback reaction to the initial market movement.

This takes time, since each trader's response time frame is different. Ultimately, there is a new feedback message to which you and other traders may respond. This feedback-reaction-feedback cycle continues as long as the market trades. Average feedback response time has been measured to be some dozens of minutes.

WHAT SHOULD YOU MEASURE?

Ticks, volume, volatility, or price all have utility, but generally, the short-term variation of each is quite large. Value is an indirect market measure that is defined as price over time or volume over time. Value is the price (range) the market prefers. To find value, you must use a measurement methodology that is consistent with the feedback response behavior. In short, you must "decode" the feedback.

Feedback decoders have been around for 20 years. First was Market Profile, developed by Peter Steidlmayer at the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), which was then followed by Meta-Profile. Both use market input to find value. Some quote vendors offer a product also called "Market Profile" to find intraday value, which can be read as support and resistance, but it's not the actual CBOT Market Profile. As with most such products, quote vendors' "Market Profile" generally comes with little explanation; it is simply there to be used.

This article will help you understand how the original Market Profile and Meta-Profile can find value and how you can evaluate your findings. However, this powerful tool has its own idiosyncrasies. This article will also clarify the use of value in daytrading and illustrate a major potential pitfall in its use.

  ...Continued in the May issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES


Excerpted from an article originally published in the May 2005 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. All rights reserved. © Copyright 2005, Technical Analysis, Inc.



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