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www.pring.com How to Manage Risk Using Technical Analysis Martin J. Pring President of Pring.com
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Page 1: Technical Analysis

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How to Manage Risk Using Technical Analysis

Martin J. PringPresident of Pring.com

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The first trading objective is to preserve capital

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#1 Trading rule…

Cut losses quickly, let profits run.

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First trade 50% loss!

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Next trade 50% gain

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Next 3 trades make 10% each

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Next 4 trades make 80%

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Still not back to break even

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A key trading rule is always run scared.

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The number one decision when entering a trade is to know where you are going to get out if the

market goes against you .

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That means setting stops ahead of time and changing them when appropriate.

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Best place to place stops is above resistance orbelow support….

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..so what are support and resistance?

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“Support” is where a declining trend canbe expected to halt, temporarily, due to

a concentration of demand.

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“Resistance” is where an advancing trend can be expected to halt, temporarily,

due to a concentration of supply.

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Support and resistance areas are not predictorsof where prices will reverse,

but merely indicate possible, or probable, points.

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"A

1. Previous low is a good point to expect support

Support has been violated

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"

B

A

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"

B New support level

C

A

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B

C

Resistance

2. Support reverses its role to resistance on the way back up

A

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B

C

A

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B

C

Previous support is now…

…potential resistance

A

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B

C

3. Resistance reverses its role to support on the way down.

Support again

A

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Rules for Determining Significanceof Support/Resistance Zones:

1. The more times a zone has been able to halt or reverse a price trend, the greater its significance.

2.The steeper the price move preceding a given support or resistance zone, the greater its significance.

3.The more a security changes hands at a particular level, the more significant that level is likely to be as a support or resistance zone.

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Where are Support/ResistancePoints Likely to Develop?

1. Previous highs and lows.

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Declining platform

Support at previous low

High could be resistanceOracle

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Declining platform

Support at previous low

Oracle

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Declining platform

Oracle

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Declining platform

Now support

Oracle

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Declining platform

Oracle

High could be resistance

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Declining platform

Oracle

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Declining platform

Oracle

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2.The upper and lower area of gaps often represent crucial support/resistance pivotal points.

Where are Support/ResistancePoints Likely to Develop?

1. Previous highs and lows.

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Declining platformSupport at gap opening

Support and resistance form at gap openings and closings.

Oracle

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Attempt to close the gap

Comcast

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Gap is closed and upper end is resistance

Chiron

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3. Emotional points on charts

2.The upper and lower area of gaps often represent crucial support/resistance pivotal points.

Where are Support/ResistancePoints Likely to Develop?

1. Previous highs and lows.

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Emotional point

Boeing Weekly

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Once violated, a violent drop

Boeing Weekly

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Resistance again

Boeing Weekly

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4. Trendlines and MA’s represent potential support/resistance zones.

3. Emotional points on charts

2.The upper and lower area of gaps often represent crucial support/resistance pivotal points.

Where are Support/ResistancePoints Likely to Develop?

1. Previous highs and lows.

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Hewlett Packard Daily

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50-day MA

Hewlett Packard Daily

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Hewlett Packard Daily

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Price moves above previous high and MA.

Hewlett Packard Daily

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200-day MA

Intersection of good trendline and reliable MA =massive potential support/resistance.

Hewlett Packard Daily

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Where are Support/ResistancePoints Likely to Develop?

5.Retracement points for previous moves; e.g., 50% Fibonacci retracement levels, etc.

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Dollar General

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eBay

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Key Places to Place Stops for Long Positions

1. Below a previous low

2. Below the extreme low of an emotional bar.

3. Below an up trendline

4. Below a reliable MA

5. On a breakout from a price pattern.

6. Better still when more than one of these conditions is met.

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Key Places to Place Stops for Short Positions

1. Above a previous high.

2. Above the extreme high of an emotional bar.

3. Above a down trendline.

4. Above a reliable MA.

5. On a breakout from a price pattern.

6. Better still when more than one of these conditions is met.

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Buy on breakoutDollar/Yen 10-minute bar

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Buy on breakoutDollar/Yen 10-minute bar

Buy just above support where trendlines converge.

Place stop below support

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Dollar/Yen 10-minute bar

Sell

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Dollar/Yen 10-minute barPlace stop above previous high

Sell

Sell into resistance at a better price.

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Dollar/Yen 10-minute bar Lower original stop just above previous high and trendline.

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Dollar/Yen 10-minute bar Lower stop just above trendline.

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Whipsaws

Australian/US Dollar 4-hour bar

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Australian/US Dollar 4-hour bar

Trendline reinforces MA.

Both act as support.

And again

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Extreme point

Australian /US Dollar 4-hour bar

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Extreme point

Australian /US Dollar 4-hour bar

Extreme point

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Australian/US Dollar 4-hour bar

Whipsaw break

Head and shoulders

Stop placed above trendline

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Downside break

Australian/US Dollar 4-hour bar

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Australian/US Dollar 4-hour bar

Upward zig zags

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False breakout (two bar reversal)

Dollar/yen 30-minute bar

Place stop below trendline or the previous minor low.

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Exhaustion break

Dollar/yen 4-hour bar

Go short using placing stop above the exhaustion high.

Later on place stop above trendline.

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Using Oscillators with Trend Following Techniques

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A key problem, is never knowing whether a market is likely to trend or become a trading range.

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One solution...split the trade into two parts.

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Liquidation of one part is triggered by a momentum signal, the other by a trend following signal.

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Sell one unit when the oscillator reaches an extreme reading and...

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....sell the second on a moving average crossover.

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If the oscillator never reaches an extreme, sell both units on a moving average crossover.

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30-period price oscillatorBuy 2 units

Take partial profit

Liquidate 2nd

unit on MA crossover

S&P 30-minute close

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30-period price oscillator

S&P 30-minute close

1st unit2nd unit

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30-period price oscillator

S&P 30-minute close

Buy

Sell 1st unit

Sell 2nd unit

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30-period price oscillator

S&P 30-minute close

1st unit

2nd unit

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Introducing the parabolic

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1. The speed of the move.

The parabolic requires two parameters.

2. The maximum unit by which it can be increased or decreased.

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The parabolic curve

Place stop

Buy Risk

S&P 30-minute close

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Risk

S&P 30-minute close

Sell

Stop moves progressively higher.

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S&P 30-minute close

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Go short on MA crossover

Cover 1st unit

Cover second unitS&P 30-minute close

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S&P 30-minute close

Parabolic

MA

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S&P 30-minute close

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Buy

Sell 1st unit

Sell 2nd unitS&P 30-minute close

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How do price patterns test?

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1. Head and shoulders, and double tops and bottoms, were tested.

2. Financial, energy, transportation, and retail sectors were tested between 1982-2003.

3. Primary bull and bear markets were identified.

Guidelines

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Nice result

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Scary decline following the breakout.

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S

HS

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S

H

S

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The concept of “L”

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S

HS

50-days

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S

HS

50-days50-days 1L

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S

HS

50-days

100-days 2L

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S

HS

50-days

50-days 1L

100% objective

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S

HS

50-days

200% objective

100-days 2L

100% objective

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1L

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1L5L

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S S

H

Primary bear market

Bullish breakoutin a bear market.

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Bullish signals in a bear market

5L in Bear Markets

496 Bottom Patterns in a Bear Trend

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496 Bottom Patterns in a Bear Trend

5L in Bear Markets

5L in Bull Markets

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1. Positive long-term KST.

2. Security should be above its long-term(e.g.,200-day) MA.

Pointers for a Primary Bull Market

Click here for online KST education.If you cannot open the “click here” hyperlink, hold down the Control key (Ctrl) and click again.

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H&S Bottom

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Momentum and Stochastic not overbought at breakout time

H&S Bottom

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Double Bottom

Stop loss line

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H&S Bottom

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Double Bottom

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The

End


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