Tracking The Footprints of WRB Gaps

This is the first in a series of posts on Gaps. Gaps are the expansion that comes after a contraction. It’s a sudden supply/demand imbalance that shows up in the price bars of a chart. Gaps show us a significant area of buyers/sellers that take control and when they lose that control.

In the video, I discuss and define a Wide Range Bar (WRB) Gap and show how to mark it out on a chart. A WRB Gap is a bar larger than the last 3 bars with a space between the previous bar and the subsequent bar. We will be marking the base of the gap. If it’s an up Gap, mark out the bottom 1/3 of the bar, if it’s a down gap, mark out the upper 1/3 of the bar.

We can then make observations about how price interacts with the base of this gap when or if it gets there. Then we can notice where in the swing process the Gap is happening. Don’t make conclusions, just observe and learn.

There are many ways to trade Gaps but first, we must first lay out some foundations and then come up with objective ways to see them. For now, simply look for the biggest ugliest bars on your chart and mark them out, and observe. These are footprints we can follow and track

Design Your Own Trading Methods: Part 3

Design Your Own trading part 1 was about understanding the swing cycle and its process. Part 2 was learning some definitions and making some distinctions so we can map. In Part 3 we explore the 3 basic ways there are to trade, range trading, breakout trading, and swing trading. When talking about methods or setups, it’s important to approach the subject in an effective manner. No setup works in a vacuum and no setup has statistical probabilities. The only edge you have is your understanding of the market at the time of the setup. This understanding comes from learning the language of price and being able to map your market and the personal experience you develop from this frame of reference.