Много полезно четиво за женените за определен пазар


http://www.tradingeducators.com/trad...an/edition542/
From time to time someone will send me a chart that looks like the one below. Along with the chart comes the question: “How would you trade this chart?”
The answer usually is “I probably wouldn’t trade it at all.”
This brings up the topic of marrying a market.
Looking at the chart below, it is not clear as to which way prices will move next.
With many markets available for trading, who is to say that I have to trade what is on that chart?
Why not look for a chart in which the price action is more precise? Why not look for a chart where prices are clearly in a trend, or a chart where prices have just broken out of a long congestion, and you can clearly see what action to take?
Why is it that traders pick one market and stay with it, even when that market is chaotic and confused?
Have you married a market?
What a terrible mistake it is to do something so foolish. There is no need for loyalty to a particular market. Yet, we hear it all the time. “I’m going to trade the e-mini S&P on a 5-minute chart.”
If you own a brick and mortar store, you are heavily dependent on people’s finding and coming to your store in order for you to be able to make money. However, if you are a trader, you can go to any market. You don’t have to wait for the market to come to you.
If you realize that you are married to a market, it’s time to get a divorce.
http://www.tradingeducators.org/imag...542/cs-542.gif