Trend Lines For Trading
Pullbacks
Trend Lines For Trading Pullbacks
Trend lines are amazing trading
tools. Even traders who swear off indicators draw trend lines. Seasoned
traders can see how price action interact with trend lines without drawing
them. If you want to join their ranks, John Hill’s Trend Line Theory is an
excellent place to start.
John Hill is a co-author of Ultimate Trading Guide, an excellent trading book. The Yum-Yum Continuation Pattern is also found in this book. John
Hill has another lesser known book called Scientific Interpretation of Bar Charts. It is a concise
manual with a chapter devoted to trading with trend lines – Trend Line Theory.
In the Trend Line Theory
chapter, John Hill introduced a variety of trend line breakout setups. The
basic idea is to find if each breakout is valid by considering :
- Trend
- Number
of pullback swings
- Relative
swing length
- Swing retracement percentage
TREND LINES AND PULLBACKS
In general, the weaker the pullback, the more likely for a trend to resume. This means that a weak pullback is worth risking our precious trading capital. On the other hand, a strong pullback is a clue that the market might reverse soon. Pullback traders should hold their reins.
With two simple trend lines,
you can observe the strength of complex pullbacks. (What is complex? At least a
three-legged pullback).
TRADING RULES – TREND LINE THEORY (PULLBACK)
First, you need to learn how to
draw the 0-2 and 0-4 lines. In a bull trend, point 0 is the extreme high of the
trend. It is the point where the pullback downwards begin.
1.
Refer to the
diagram below and start by labeling the points 0 to 4.
2.
Then, connect point
0 to point 2. That’s your 0-2 line (in pink).
3.
Now, connect point
0 to point 4 for your 0-4 line (in green).
The crux of our evaluation lies
in which the relative slope of the two lines.
If the 0-4 line is steeper, the
pullback has power. Avoid trading this pullback.
If the 0-2 line is steeper, the
pullback lacks strength, consider trading this pullback.
The examples above show a
bullish market. You can apply the same logic to bearish markets. Go through an
exercise to draw the equivalent diagram for a bearish trend. (Check your
conclusion against the trading rules below.)
LONG PULLBACK
TRADE
1.
Bull trend
2.
0-4 line is higher
than 0-2 line
3.
Buy on bullish
breakout of 0-4 line
SHORT PULLBACK TRADE
1.
Bear trend
2.
0-4 line is lower
than 0-2 line
3.
Sell on bearish
breakout of 0-4 line
The setup rules might be a
little confusing at first. Just focus on the 0-4 line.
- For
a long pullback
trade in a bull trend,
the 0-4 line should be higher.
- For
a short pullback
trade in a bear trend,
the 0-4 line should be lower.
TRADING EXAMPLES – TREND LINE
THEORY (PULLBACK)
As we expect to trade deeper
pullbacks here, an intermediate indicator period is suitable. Hence, in the
examples below, We used the 50-period SMA (orange) to check the trend.
We have also marked the price
swings in blue to highlight the anchors of each trend line.
WINNING TRADE
This is a daily chart of
McDonald’s Corporation (MCD).
1.
MCD was below its
50-period SMA, trending downwards.
2.
Price started to
pullback upwards. In the second leg up, there were four consecutive
bull bars, a sign of strength.
3.
However, the trend
line analysis produces a different conclusion. The 0-4 line was lower.
This meant that, despite the upwards thrust, the bears were growing stronger.
Moreover, there was resistance from the SMA. Hence, we sold as price broke below
the 0-4 line.
MCD continued the downwards
trend, and the short position was profitable.
LOSING TRADE
This is a daily chart of Exxon
Mobil Corporation (XOM).
1.
XOM was in free
fall after a pullback to the 50-period EMA.
2.
This pullback
showed many strong bullish trend bars and great momentum. Moreover, it
cancelled most of the earlier bear swing.
3.
As the 0-4 line was
below the 0-2 line, the market prompted a short entry when it broke the 0-4
line.
4.
However, instead of
continuing to fall, prices drifted up after some meandering.
In this losing example, the
deep retracement of the pullback was a clear warning sign. When pullbacks go
too deep, it might be a reversal in disguise.
REVIEW – TREND LINE THEORY (PULLBACK)
This is a clever way of using
trend lines. Pay attention to the trend context, and you have a reliable
pullback setup.
This setup goes beyond using
trend lines for judging market bias or simple breakouts. It combines two trend
lines (0-2 and 0-4 lines) to judge the strength of a pullback.
Trend lines hang on swing
pivots. A point of confusion is that there are many ways to mark swing pivots.
These different methods affect the slope of the resultant trend lines.
A safer entry method is to
wait for a confirmed trend line break. It means waiting for a bar to
close below (or above) the trend line. But this could cause you to miss
(or get in late for) the most profitable and swift breaks.
In all, John Hill’s Scientific Interpretation of Bar Charts has many intriguing price action ideas like
this one. It is definitely a book worth studying in detail for all price action
traders.
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