Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Double Wedge


A double wedge is simply two wedges that terminate at the same bar. In the chart above, it may be argued that there are two wedges W 6,24,52 and W 34,39,52 or other variant. A double wedge can lead to a large move (b63-b81).

For a double wedge to form, a pullback from a recent swing point (b24) needs to be deep enough that the next leg is likely to need multiple pushes to take out. A strong deep move (b24-33) consisting of CT bars may also demonstrate counter-trend strength that will encourage with-trend traders to exit and counter-trend traders to enter beyond the swing point (above b24).

10 comments:

  1. What made you wait & take bar 13 and instead of bar 9 for the 1PB?

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  2. In re-reading you Oct 6 commentary re traps, you mention "however, a reversal bar needs to dip beyond a prior swing to be valid--if not its just a range bar."
    can you elaborate a bit. thanks much.

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  3. Omar, A possible reversal at b6 means you need to wait for a two legged 1PB.

    JinJin, From Al Brooks book chapter 1, reversal bars need to dip below prior swing otherwise they are not reversing anything

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  4. Cad,

    Why did you not enter the W1P on b61? Why did you wait?

    MG

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  5. Hi Cad, in your post about RVBs b6,15,33,39 would not have been valid RVBs, because they didn't dip beyond a prior swing?
    Or does swing mean previous bar? Like not being inside bars?

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  6. Why isn't b6 the 1PB of the "gap move"?

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  7. TD, b15 is not a reversal bar, but the rest of them did take out prior swings: b3,28,34

    b6 is indeed a 2L pb to the ema after a gap down. However, its likely to be just one leg and since its far from the ema, you would wait for at least another leg up.

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  8. MG, b58 was a possible 2L down to ema. A 2L PB to ema after a W is one of the "best trades" in Al Brooks book. In such cases, I usually take the second attempt.

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  9. Hi Cad, The question below related to your post about RVBs (11/15). I just put it here because of JimJinNJs comment.

    Hi Cad, in your post about RVBs b6,15,33,39 would not have been valid RVBs, because they didn't dip beyond a prior swing?
    Or does swing mean previous bar? Like not being inside bars?

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  10. Hi Cad, B6 was a L2 if one doesn't reset the count at the OB4. Is there a "hard fast rule" to distinguish legs from Hx/Lx in pullbacks (like b4 not being a bear bar)? I'm really struggling sometimes to distinguish between them.

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