Dislikedso 99% of the time a doji candle will have low spread, while a long candle will most likely have a high spread.Ignored
QuoteDislikedIts a tremendously important factor to consider the spread in the equation, i dont know why you guys act like i`m talking some weird thing here, when in fact this can be considered basic money management
Of course it is, but making up fantasies about particular types of candles equating some level of spread is fanciful nonsense.
The amount the spread tends to fluctuate, in general, is so arbitrarily small as to be meaningless. Trying to pick the tiny moments when the spread gets 1 or 2 pipettes smaller than a moment ago is trying to pick-up pennies in front of a steamroller that has just busted down the walls to a vault of gold.
Perhaps you have some "special" price feed where you get these doji's = low spread, but I'm fairly sure nobody else has this price feed.
You are concerning yourself with nothing, so that is perhaps why you find yourself so flabbergasted as to why people don't particularly care about the spread. The spread is something you can not control. You can assume certain spread sizes at certain times, but other than that it's simply uninteresting and unimportant except for when it blows-out. The range of movement that price makes in a session in comparison to the spread... now that is interesting and fucking important. But concerning oneself over pipettes is folly.
P.s. you don't need to explain, and / or show diagrams, of what a fucking doji is . Surely you jest by pretending I or others don't know what a doji is! Should I take it as a joke, or an insult?