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Back :: Swing Trade Setups

Swing Trade Setups

Featured setups from Monday January 31, 2005 closing data symbol scan

Jump to: Long Setups | Short Setups | Special Situations

Entry and Exit Strategies

Entries: Each chart posted includes the TrendVue High/Low indicator in the chart legend, showing the high and low of the prior day. We refer to these values frequently for setting stops, alerts and initial protective stops.

Our trade entry methodology stresses that price should prove to us where it wants to go, consequently all of our setups involve placing entry stop/stop limit orders where a trade will be initiated for us automatically, if price is able to move in the expected direction.

When price does not comply, we evaluate the setup to determine if it is either a) an expanding pattern or b) an invalidated setup. For example, a 3 bar bull flag setup that does not trigger can be followed up the next day with a buy stop above the new 4th bar, provided that price doesn’t invalidate the bull flag pattern.

Exits: Once in a trade, we must place an initial protective stop as soon as possible. Consider this stop your crash stop – an emergency measure which you hope will never get used, but is there for your protection in case you lose all connectivity to your broker or some other unforseen event takes place. The initial protective stop, unless noted otherwise, is always at the opposite end of the bar used to trigger a trade.

For example, if our trade setup for a long trade is based upon a break of yesterday’s high, we will use yesterday’s low as our initial protective stop.

The next task for us, once in a trade, is to find the earliest reasonable opportunity to move stops up. Trade and risk management is a highly personal topic; we can only relate to what works for us. In general, once a trade is substantially profitable, or has started to trend on a 10 or 20 minute chart intraday, I move to a break-even stop immediately.

Once the trade has surivied its first day, we are already on watch to look for our profit exit. Here your personal objectives come into play. A longer-term investor using swing trading techniques to improve entry and exit will tend to give a trade some room. Our recommendation is to use the break even stop until the stock starts to trend (higher highs, higher lows or the reverse in a down trend).

Short term swing traders will tend to use price extension estimates and pre-place exit orders at these estimates. This discussion goes beyond the scope of our daily swing trade service, however we are happy to entertain questions in TrendVue Trader Talk on any subject.

Long Setups

General common strategy: Unless noted otherwise, buy stop just above the “high” value, with an initial protective stop at the low value of the bar, not below the bar.

Test of Bottom – Reversal


ATYT I wanted to include this chart not because it is compelling, but because there are so many like it—a steep drop followed by an inside day or harami – these are all potential “Three Inside Up” long patterns here. Hold overnight only if closes strongly, and be wary of the trade immediately after initial trigger.

Retracement or Pause in Up Swing / Up Trend


INFA stopped going down days ago, which makes it noteworthy. This is the first retracement or pause sine bottoming out 6 days ago.

Short Setups

General common strategy: Unless noted otherwise, place a sell alert at or just below the low of the setup bar, and look for the first failed intraday bounce after the low has been broken. What we are looking for is price to push down, bounce a little, and fail again – this is where we want to get short.

Test of Bottom – Continuation


GLW – an up day within a still intact downswing, at a test of bottom. Sell alert just below yesterday’s lows.


NOVL – same picture. It is not dissimilar to RHAT either.

Special Situations


RHAT – aggressive long – we know that important resistance is just overhead, so the only reason for attempting this is in case Friday’s selling was the cathartic last gasp. If the stock does not act strongly, we are not interested.

05.02.01 09:29 #