Disliked{quote} Hi, Could you pls. make change to your indicator, it will delete all objects when WW was not found. Pls. do not let it delete all objects, it will affect other indicators and manual marks... Thanks!Ignored
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My new journey with Wolfe Waves... 6 replies
Elliot Waves/Demark Waves 2 replies
about Wolfe Wave theory? 3 replies
Traders who completed the Wolfe Wave course already. 0 replies
Help needed to build a Wolfe Waves Expert Advisor EA 3 replies
Disliked{quote} Hi, Could you pls. make change to your indicator, it will delete all objects when WW was not found. Pls. do not let it delete all objects, it will affect other indicators and manual marks... Thanks!Ignored
Disliked{quote} I noticed that too, I thought I was hallucinating. I was positive I put a trend line on my chart but it disappeared.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Thanks, good point , i hope problem has been solved for now , I am trying to complete the new version soon{file}Ignored
Disliked...Disliked{quote} For 5 years, i have wasted too much time on " trend or martingale" trading. And this thread tells me " market is a living animal",studying the crowd psychology is the only way to win. Now I'm finally on the right way...[/quote hey dude, I am glad you get over this martingale bs, but do not get too exited, wolf wave is a purely counter trend pattern, you will be chasing falling knives that are the most rewarding but the most difficult losses to manage.IgnoredIgnored
Disliked{quote}{quote} Hi, I was giving this some thought over the weekend and I don't think that it is entirely true that it is purely a countertrend pattern. I suppose it depends on one's perspective. For instance, suppose we have a broad bull channel on, say, the H4 timeframe where price has come down to touch the trend line. Let's take a textbook TR / channel scenario where we are looking at a nice two legs up from the bottom to the top of the channel. The pullback in between the legs could very well have the stair-stepping pattern on a lower timeframe...Ignored
Disliked{quote} Hey brother I'm trying to figure out what you're trading. I'm assuming it's just based on price action because I don't see any Wolfe wave. That's fine, I just am confusedIgnored
Disliked...Disliked{quote} For 5 years, i have wasted too much time on " trend or martingale" trading. And this thread tells me " market is a living animal",studying the crowd psychology is the only way to win. Now I'm finally on the right way...[/quote hey dude, I am glad you get over this martingale bs, but do not get too exited, wolf wave is a purely counter trend pattern, you will be chasing falling knives that are the most rewarding but the most difficult losses to manage.IgnoredIgnored
Disliked{quote} Easy, a wolfe wave to unfold need 3 waves that you will enter against it at the end of the third wave. it is then a pure counter trend trading, you can still say the primary trend blabla, but 3 waves in a direction and taking the opossite side is not purely counter trend ? you are trading against the momentum, it is what gives the strenght to the wolf wave but is also its weakness.Ignored
Disliked{quote} sorry, i dont know what's wrong, pls. point out, thanks! {image}Ignored
Disliked{quote} I think you have completely missed the point of what I am saying. If it was not clear, then my apologies. The way many traders enter trends is by waiting for a pullback - agreed? By definition, a pullback is a smaller trend in the opposite direction so entering the main trend again is trading counter and against the momentum of the pullback. Obviously the pullback has to be weak in relation to the trend. So, a higher probability way to trade the Wolfe Wave
pattern is to identify the setup on a lower time frame during a pullback in an obvious...Ignored
Disliked{quote} hi dude, I totally got your point, for me any pull back is a counter trend entry, the wolfe wave being one of the most needed trend in order to unfold, x abcd needs time and space aka a trend. A stop order above the high would be a trend continuation entry, there is of course trend continuation patterns but that are taken in counter trend. To make it simple, when price makes lower low and you buy, it is a counter trend entry, if price makes higher high and you buy it is a trend continuation entry.Ignored
Disliked{quote} Hey, Fair enough. The way you view the market is no doubt useful to you and that's great. For me there are many ways to view situations. For example, as a trend trader you would bet on most attempts to reverse the trend being unsuccessful. Therefore buying on a limit order below prior bars in a bull trend can be a prudent thing to do. One would be betting on continuation of the trend, but if the prior bar was a bear bar (and therefore a bear trend on some lower timeframe) by your definition it would be a purely counter trend trade. I guess...Ignored
Disliked{quote} Well not exactly, I was speaking about a counter trend once 3 waves unfolded to meet a wolfe wave which the entry would be counter trend because you would buy a bottom. Is a wolf wave not a pattern with 3 lower lows ? Then buying in this scenario is not a counter trend trade ?Ignored
Disliked{quote} Well not exactly, I was speaking about a counter trend once 3 waves unfolded to meet a wolfe wave which the entry would be counter trend because you would buy a bottom. Is a wolf wave not a pattern with 3 lower lows ? Then buying in this scenario is not a counter trend trade ?Ignored
Disliked{quote} I guess it depends on the scale you are watching. There's no one trend IMHO, only waves within waves {image} Maybe we can agree that both perspective are truthful in their own contextIgnored