I have followed Joel's blog for several months and although I have not followed or traded the strategies as he has done, there has never been any suspicion in my mind that he might be fluffing the results.
Personally I find it difficult to follow such a strategy entering using a 'stretch' off the open and, it is simply not in my nature to leave a trade unattended for a week. However, it did arouse my interest in breakout strategies, and has formed an integral part of my approach to the market in formulating a bias based upon weekly, daily and session direction. If I can trade the first breakout or get a fade from support/resistance early in these time periods then I have much greater confidence that a significant move will ensue, than if I had taken a trade at any other time. The high or low of the day is made in the first 30 mins of trading around 33% of the time, and when it does not, the breakout is usually vigorous enough to bank some profits and manage risk enough to 'ride out the market' cheaply, and often with positive results, especially in this volatile market. Similarly, the breakout from the first Asian session of the week can yield significant information about the sentiment of market participants who show their hands during the early European session, and this information may have predictive value for future sentiment. This is why these simple strategies have an edge - when price choses a direction it usually sticks to it. Personally I try to pick my entries a little more precisely but it is hard to criticise the simplicity of the First Strike/Open Range Breakout Strategies or their recent performance.
Personally I find it difficult to follow such a strategy entering using a 'stretch' off the open and, it is simply not in my nature to leave a trade unattended for a week. However, it did arouse my interest in breakout strategies, and has formed an integral part of my approach to the market in formulating a bias based upon weekly, daily and session direction. If I can trade the first breakout or get a fade from support/resistance early in these time periods then I have much greater confidence that a significant move will ensue, than if I had taken a trade at any other time. The high or low of the day is made in the first 30 mins of trading around 33% of the time, and when it does not, the breakout is usually vigorous enough to bank some profits and manage risk enough to 'ride out the market' cheaply, and often with positive results, especially in this volatile market. Similarly, the breakout from the first Asian session of the week can yield significant information about the sentiment of market participants who show their hands during the early European session, and this information may have predictive value for future sentiment. This is why these simple strategies have an edge - when price choses a direction it usually sticks to it. Personally I try to pick my entries a little more precisely but it is hard to criticise the simplicity of the First Strike/Open Range Breakout Strategies or their recent performance.