here are three key features when it comes to developing a trading system: entry and exit signals, a plan for the type of stop, and a money management strategy. The first involves generating the signals, which can be purely encode visual signals. In this article I will take two of the better-known technical indicators and […]
here are three key features when it comes to
developing a trading system: entry and exit
signals, a plan for the type of stop, and a money
management strategy. The first involves
generating the signals, which can be purely
encode visual signals. In this article I will take two of the
better-known technical indicators and go through the steps
involved in developing a trading system
The two indicators I will be using are Bollinger Bands
and stochastic relative strength index (StochRSI). StochRSI
All known information is reflected in the price Buyers and sellers move markets based on expectations and emotions (fear and greed
which combines the features of stochastics and RSI, was detailed in Tushar S. Chande and Stanley Kroll’s book The New Technical Trader. I selected this combination because it is a useful way to determine when prices will stop tagging a Bollinger Band and are likely to move all the way from one band to the next. Of course, those prices may not move all the way, so you will need to use stops for protection. You will also want to use a simple moneymanagement strategy of allocating only a portion of your capital to any one position