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Trading Resources
& Information
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High Low
Breakout Technique
This technique
can be used for any market that has a decent daily range. If
you look at any chart, what do you see?
You should see
a succession of bars that are doing one of three things.
-
Going up
- Going down
- Going sideways
Unless today's
bar turns out to be an inside day or very rarely the high and
low of today are exactly the same as the high and low as
yesterday, then we will have a new high or low.
Think about it.
Today's bar, in all probability will make a higher high than
yesterday's bar or a lower low than yesterday's bar. This
information is very powerful. Look at the chart below:

Now, the
question is - how much of a higher high or lower low will
today achieve than yesterday?
In our next
example, company XYZ had a range of 200 points (high minus the
low) yesterday. Today the high might be 50 points higher than
yesterday's bar or 50 points lower than yesterday's bar. If we
can find the average daily distance between the high of
yesterday's bar to the high of today's bar and the average
daily distance between the low of yesterday's bar and the low
of today's bar, then we might have a trading opportunity.

Make yourself a
little excel sheet or grab a pen and paper and start tracking
the high and lows of each day. Then deduct the high of today
from yesterday's high and the low of today from yesterday's
low. After you have a few day's worth of data you can get an
average. On the excel sheet, below the first five columns are
the date, open, high, low and close. "DR" is daily
range, "TH-YH" is today's high minus yesterday's high and "YL-TL"
is yesterday's low minus today's low. In the "TH-YH" column, I
only record an entry if today's high is greater than
yesterday's high and in the "YL-TL" I only record an entry if
today's low is lower than yesterday's low. All pretty simple
stuff.

OK, as you can
see, the example of the GBP/USD (Pound/Dollar). The average
breakout up was 54 pips and the average breakout down was 60
pips. The next thing to do is apply this knowledge to our
trading.
On the 2nd
September the high was 1.7972 and the low was 1.7864. We are
looking for a breakout of either of these points. It doesn't
matter which way. So on the 3rd September you mark the
previous day's high and low and monitor what happens when it
reaches these points.

The way I trade
this setup is to wait for the market to test the low or high
of the previous day and then pullback. I don't enter on a
break of the previous day's high/low, I wait for a pullback of
either a test of the high/low or a break of the high/low.
As you can see
from the chart, the market came down and tested the low of
1.7864 and then pulled back. The low that was made was just a
few pips lower than the previous day's low and formed a little
support area. That support area is the breakout point.
You can place
an entry order a couple of pips below the support area with a
target of the average "YL-TL" as a target, which in this case
was 60 pips. The stop is a bit more tricky. If the pullback is
not too big you can place your stop just above the pullback
area (resistance). If the distance is too great, then just use
Dollar stop.
You can even
take this down to a 1 minute chart and scalp the market with a
very tight stop. There are loads of ways to trade this setup.
You could add some indicators for confirmation. You could use
the entry as setup for a position trade. You could even
concentrate on inside day's where the breakout might have a
much larger range.
However you
decide to trade it, at least take note of the previous day's
high and low.
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© Mark McRae
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