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Bilateral Trade
Setups
| When it comes to trade setups, it's not always an either-or
situation. In fact, you can double your fun with bilateral trade
setups. Start by overcoming directional bias when you look at a
price pattern. |
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Although
you may see it in your mind as a long or a short,
chances are it will work in either direction. The trick
is to let the price action tell you which way to go.
Let's back up a step and see how this works. Many patterns
exhibit well-defined support and resistance. Bilateral setups
use both levels for trade execution. A long entry is signaled if
price breaks resistance to the upside. Conversely, a short sale
is signaled if price breaks support to the downside. But you
still have more work to do before taking a bilateral trade.
After all, making money is the whole point of the exercise.
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| Every trade setup generates a unique reward/risk profile. In
other words, it tells you how much you stand to win or lose
should you decide to take a position. Each side of a bilateral
setup carries a different reward/risk ratio. Most of the time,
one side shows more profit potential than the other side. This
can be frustrating because the calculation is independent of the
odds that either outcome will actually take place. So you may
have a great, high-odds setup with little or no reward, or a
lousy, low-odds setup that would earn a fortune if it ever
happens. |
The price trigger complicates bilateral trade entry. Trading
signals come in all varieties. The best ones ring very loud
bells within very narrow price levels. One classic example is a
high-volume breakout through a major moving average. Bilateral
strategies force you to locate trigger prices on both sides of
the pattern. Many times one side will bark much louder than the
other when price hits the associated trigger.
Bilateral setups work best when they fit into larger cycles
that encourage price movement in either direction. For example,
a stock drops off a broad rally into an extended correction.
Smaller patterns within this correction may trigger short-term
rallies or selloffs. Bilateral strategy lets the trader take
advantage of the mixed environment and execute price swings in
both directions.
Let's review the signposts of this two-way trading street. We
need well-defined support-resistance levels, a defined
reward/risk ratio on both sides of the equation, clean price
triggers and a big picture that lets us execute in either
direction. Sounds simple enough, and it is.
The difficulty lies in our ability to control bias and to let
the market tell us which way to go. Very often the best trade is
in the opposite direction from the most obvious outcome for that
pattern. In other words, the majority piles in one way, but the
profit comes from trading it the other way.
The good news about these fascinating patterns is they may
tell you when the move is about to happen. Congestion often
narrows toward a trigger point. We see this in triangle patterns
where two trendlines converge in price and time. Bilateral
setups may show this convergence through simple lines, or
sometimes through more complicated volatility cycles.
Volatility drops off through the formation of most bilateral
patterns. It tends to reach a definable low, and then trigger a
sharp price expansion. Traders examine narrow range price bars
near support or resistance levels in order to predict impending
price triggers. They also study classic volatility indicators to
locate these turning points in developing patterns.
Swing traders go long or short, depending on the opportunity.
Bilateral setups cut their workloads by presenting two possible
trades in a single pattern. So always look at both sides of the
equation when examining a price chart. Then leave your bias at
the door, and take whatever the market gives you.
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