Over the years I have seen many gurus come and go. Some crash and burn in a spectacular way, others slip out the back door quietly when their teachings fail. So let’s get one thing straight: I am not a guru. I am however the boss of this thread and as such I will not tolerate bad behavior of any sort.
Ok, now we got that sorted…
I decided to share my system. But to be honest, it’s not mine. I just assembled parts from other skilled people I’ve learned from over the years. As will be obvious I’ve borrowed the basic structure from Captain Currency, aka Andy Perry, who runs an excellent thread on this forum. I have also learned and borrowed concepts from Courtney D. Smith as well as from the Turtle Traders. And of course the Technical Templates threads also found on this forum are goldmines. These are just a small selection of the traders and books I’ve learned from, the full list would require a thread of its own…
TrendLover is a multiple timeframe system. As the name suggests it attempts to always trade in the direction of the trend. So, the first step when looking for a trade is to determine the trend, if any exists.
We apply a 60SMA to the two timeframes above our trading timeframe. Ie, if we want to trade the 4H timeframe we will then apply a 60SMA to the Daily and the Weekly timeframes. The system is built to fit Metatrader 4 and due to the sequence of different timeframes offered I’ve made some adjustments to which higher timeframe SMAs should be relevant to each trading timeframe.
So, to recapitulate, the first step involves finding an instrument where price is either above or below both of the higher timeframe SMAs.
The second step is to identify a retracement against the higher timeframe trend. We now operate on the trading timeframe. Here we apply a Stochastic indicator with settings: 14, 3, 3
If the price is above the higher timeframes’ SMAs, then we wait for the Stochastic on the trading timeframe to turn below 20, aka into oversold territory. We don’t care about Stochastic crossovers or wait for it to exit the oversold area again or anything else. All we care about is seeing the indicator close below 20.
Once this happens the next indicator comes into use, the Donchian channel. I will not explain what the Donchian channel or any other indicator does. If you don’t know then there are excellent resources just a google away.
The Donchian channel is set to a period of 10. We now place a pending order one pip or so above the upper Donchian channel, while making sure that the potential entry point is located above both higher timeframe SMAs.
We now keep moving the pending long order along with the Donchian channel until it either activates, or until the entry point sinks so low that it is no longer above both higher timeframe SMAs.
The one point that requires some discretion is the placement of the initial stop loss, I will get into this in a future post. Once the trade activates we will either be stopped out by the initial stop loss or by the lower Donchian channel which we will use as our trailing stop loss.
There are some other options for early exits that we will also discuss in a future post.
The beauty of this system is that it is scalable, ie it works for trading the 4H as well as the 5min timeframes.
I use a few modified indicators which I will post soon along with my template.
This system is of course not perfect and it will suffer losses just like any system, but it is built on very sound principles and I have not been able to find anything that is better. I also enjoy the fact that it is so simple that anyone can understand how and why it works.
There are so many threads here and on all other forums that focus on systems and approaches that simply do not work or are so difficult to understand that they become black box systems. I thought I should offer something that works consistently over time and that doesn’t use anything else than simple indicators from what can only be regarded as the public domain.
To be continued
TrendLover.zip (5.19 KB)