Key Daytime Frame Charts – 3/15/2022

Key Daytime Frame Charts – 3/15/2022

Introduction

Using today (Tuesday, 3/15/2022) as a reference point, I want to walk through my process for setting the key levels I communicate to the Navigator Active Traders™ members each morning. I also want you to know how they work.

To summarize, first, I look at the options market to determine what kind of volatility is at hand for the week ahead, so I have a reasonable expectation of trending versus reversionary behavior.

On Friday evenings after the market closes, I set the expected move (WEM) range to establish my trading “sandbox” for the week ahead. Setting the probable zone allows me to prioritize the various support, resistance, and turning points price will encounter in the sandbox.

I set the expected move for the day (DEM) as a daily sandbox inside the weekly sandbox each weekday morning. The projected daily range allows me to further refine the support, resistance, and turning points in my windshield for that day. 

I look for clusters of support and resistance where I might initiate trades or target profits. I divide the sandboxes into quartiles for the day and week to help me correctly position trades depending on the bull, bear, or balancing context.

I monitor internals and follow-through, using market and volume profiles (a separate discussion) to help determine if the market is likely to trend higher, lower, or sideways. 

In short, I consistently apply a well-defined process that facilitates my day and swing trading success. Many of the variables discussed are also weighted components of our proprietary Navigator Algorithms™.

I publish the key levels at 7 am for the Navigator Active Trader™ subscribers. Subscribers also get access to attend our twice-weekly Pro Trading Room, where you can watch me prioritize and trade these levels.

You can click the button at the end of this discussion to learn more about a Navigator Active Trader™ subscription.

Weekly Trading Sandbox

Calculating the Weekly Expected Move is the first step in your trading plan for the week ahead. The move defines the macro sandbox for daytime frame trading during the week. It is your Sunday project.

The Weekly Expected Move gives you invaluable information about the overbought or oversold nature of the index in initiating trades and taking profits throughout the week. The market will stay within the boundaries 70% of the time.

I like to divide the weekly range into quartiles and generally look to initiate my long day trades when the index is in the first WEM quartile (shaded green) and target profits in the last quartile (colored red). Shorts are just the reverse.

It is also acceptable to divide the range into thirds. Whatever works for you is OK, as long as you understand the concept.

Of course, whether to focus on longs or shorts depends on context. Taking trades between the shaded boxes depends on the circumstances as well. But the closer you get to the middle when initiating a trade, the more likely you might be starting transactions in no man’s land.

Naturally, you can manage a trade initiated in the red or green zone through the middle. It depends on your target, and you can always trail a stop.

Knowing the range also helps you identify other key levels you may encounter as they travel inside the sandbox during the week. You can focus on the most likely moving averages, support, resistance levels, etc., where your trade might stall or change direction.

For the most part, you can ignore potential happenings outside the top of the red shaded boundary and the bottom of the green shaded edge, which are the maximum endpoints of the expected move.

The Weekly Expected Move sets the edges where Dealers and Market Makers begin to lose money if the price moves outside the range and stays there when weekly options expire at Friday’s close. Dealers and Market Makers will vigorously defend the boundaries or lose billions of dollars on a breakout.

Sometimes the price will exceed the boundaries intra-week. Such breakouts are acceptable to a point. But it is best to nail your profits at the boundaries. You will often be surprised to see the price return inside the range by Friday’s close. The possibility may create a trade set-up in and of itself.

But be aware that if the price exceeds either boundary significantly, Dealers and Market Makers may aggressively hedge their portfolio deltas by selling futures into the same direction of the move, potentially making the advance or decline worse.

Next, we set the daily expected move ranges for the trading day ahead.

Daily Trading Sandbox

Calculating the Daily Expected Moves is the second step in your daily planning. The boundaries define the sandbox for daytime frame trading just like the Weekly Expected Move does for the week ahead.

Combining the Daily and Weekly Expected Moves gives you invaluable information in taking your trades throughout the week.

Just like the week, I like to divide the daily range into quartiles and take longs in the first quartile (shaded green) and target profits in the last quartile (shaded red). Shorts are just the reverse.

But these decisions are also influenced by the index’s location inside the Weekly Expected Move range. Depending on the context, overlapping weekly and daily green and red zones deserve your attention.

For the daily chart, there are three expected move data points. The first data point is the expected high and low calculated from the RTH session Open. This calculation is beneficial when there is a large opening gap. Our estimate also incorporates options gamma, a valuable filter.

The second and third expected moves are data points calculated from the previous day’s close. Historically, the first data points from the close contain roughly 70% of the daily price action. The second levels frame about 90%.

Since there are multiple-choice data points in the daytime frame, choosing your anchors for the quartiles is a bit of an art. Is the market balanced or trending? Are the internals solid or weak? Did the market gap open? Should you be focusing on longs or shorts, or both? Pick the broader or narrower expected move range accordingly.

It is also helpful to identify other vital levels you will encounter in the daily sandbox. Suppose there are moving averages, additional support and resistance levels, etc… In those cases, you will better understand where to initiate new trades, set targets, and identify where the market may stall or reverse.

Now, let’s identify and add any key trendlines to our sandbox.

Today's Key Trendlines

Overnight and morning traders ran stops under the Primary Uptrend Line from the March 2020 China Virus Crash low and under the 2/8 low. Then they brought the market back up into yesterday’s range. The market’s rejection of lower prices and return inside yesterday’s range was impressive.

The price action reminds me that the market is holding its ground despite the constant stream of bad news since the 2/22 Ukraine Invasion low. As discussed in the 3/6 Navigator Oracle, the low remains secure. The market also conquered and retested a minor downtrend line on today’s strong advance.

All in all, today’s market action was bullish – even if it mainly was short-covering. But the market is still sandwiched between its Primary Uptrend and Downtrend Lines.

The pattern looks more like a bear flag to go down on the NASDAQ 100 and a falling wedge to rally on the S&P 500. But even on the S&P 500, the wedge may need lower prices to complete.

The Fed meeting reaction tomorrow will help the market resolve its consolidation. Quadruple witching expiration Friday would appear to provide some supportive gamma, but I thought that last month as well, and the market dipped into expiration anyway.

With sentiment at record low levels and a lot of cash on the sidelines, it would not take much to trigger short-covering. But there is unlikely to be an all-clear signal until next week.

Seasonally, the stock market tends to turn higher in mid-March. If the 2/24 low is the 20-week cycle trough, a relief rally is the most likely outcome as we get through the Fed announcement and options/futures expiration.

Let’s move on to the simplicity of the two support and two resistance levels I communicated this morning when the charts and colors briefly turned me into a mad scientist.

Today's Pre-Announced Key Support and Resistance

Today’s story was the market heading north after two bear days in a row, The market stalled at the first pre-announced resistance (1) for an hour. The level coincided with the minor downtrend line on the trendline chart above. 

After clearing the trendline, the market returned to retest the break above (2). Then the market rallied up to our second pre-announced resistance level, where the market stalled again into the close.

As we move down the chart list, you will see additional support and resistance constructs in the same neighborhood. The levels work whether you use them as targets for trade initiation or profits.

Now let’s look at some calendar-based levels.

Today's Relevant Calendar Based Levels

It is important to track certain calendar levels as they often act as support and resistance as the trading day begins and when you encounter the weekly and monthly levels in your sandbox.

I always mark the current monthly and weekly open because that is where the respective candles turn green or red (“screens go green”), as it is often said. I will also have the high and low for the previous month and week on my screens, as those can be important inflection points.

Remember that every bar or candle sets up a trading and breakout range, whether the bar is one minute or one month. It is impractical to trade a one-minute bar as such, but weekly and monthly candles are typically large enough to be monitored as a range. A sustained break above the candle is bullish and vice versa.

I also want the previous day’s high and low and the Globex high and low marked. Each day, the opening drives will often start by testing the overnight high and low and the previous day’s high and low to find the path of least resistance.

Today, the market opened at the overnight high and kept going. It finally reached yesterday’s high at the close. Yesterday’s candle was somewhat large, so it took a long trip up to test the top. Ultimately, the price closed above yesterday’s RTH high, another bullish sign.

If the previous day is a trend day with a large candle and extensive range, it is also helpful to mark the 50% point on the candle, also called the “halfback.” In such cases, the halfback can provide support or resistance and can be a target for taking profits on your trade.

Now, let’s take a look at the options market’s influence on today’s price action. 

Today's Influential Option Levels

The influence of options on the stock market has never been more significant. We track the highest impact levels and observe the index when it encounters them.

Every option generally has a dealer/market maker on the other side of the trade. With data from the exchanges and a few inferences, we can predict how these professionals will hedge their positions and where. 

Sometimes I feel as if the options information we convey is as close as we can get to legal, insider trading. Simply put, the various levels, regardless of the nomenclature, act as support and resistance. When there are clusters of lines, the area will likely be strong support and resistance.

For example, see the group of levels on the chart above around 4200, with the next collection above at 4300. These option levels have been primarily responsible for the market’s current rangebound conditions. You can see the influence today.

We also track the price where gamma and delta shift from negative to positive and vice versa. And there is another important level we monitor called the “volatility trigger.”

The market and price ranges behave very differently above and below these points. This helps me calculate the implied moves for the day and week. I can also anticipate intraday range expansion or contraction.

Today, the fact that the price traveled back up and through the gamma cluster at 4200 let us know that dealers and market makers are still willing to vigorously defend that price, which is also the Weekly Expected Move low. Coincidence? Not likely.

The market first stalled when it encountered the 4th largest combined gamma level of the S&P 500 Cash Index (SPX) and the Index ETF (SPY) around 4250.

Now let’s see if we can put all these together to give us a relevant framework traded today.

This is a one-minute chart of A.F. Thornton's Key Trading Levels for the 3/15/2021 expected range we call the "Sandbox" bounded by the top of the red shaded area and the bottom of the green shaded area.
This is a one-minute chart of A.F. Thornton's Key Trading Levels for the 3/15/2021 expected range we call the "Sandbox" bounded by the top of the red shaded area and the bottom of the green shaded area.

Completed Sandbox for 3/15/2022

Now, we can put it all together using a one-minute candle chart to magnify the granularity and separate some of the clusters. I’m not too fond of a busy chart. So in my setup, I can lay on the levels one at a time.

Also, don’t be afraid to rough out a level representing a cluster or shade a wider rectangle to define the area on your chart. Keep your charts as uncluttered and straightforward as possible. I crafted my process to put everything in front of me long before the open precisely to prioritize.

The first issue that stands out today is that you could have used the two support and two resistance levels I communicated to you in the Morning Notes. That is often the case.

With Internals strong, you could have bought any dip on a pivot (confirmed when my candles flip from orange to blue. You would be wise to skip the typical Chicago and New York lunch consolidation periods and catch the afternoon drive.

You could have used the Algo Trigger for confirmation in the five or 15-minute time frames, and the Internals guided that price action favored longs over shorts. 

I did not trade today because I am busy creating templates to deliver these charts every morning timely. They take so long to hand draw that I automate the lines and levels.

There are more issues to cover in day trading, but the information covered here is what matters as far as key levels.

Today's Conclusions

To summarize then, you start with the weekly range and focus on the material support and resistance levels you might encounter. Step out and look at the big picture.

Then each morning, you hone that down to what is in your windshield for the day. You look for clusters of support and resistance both as levels to initiate trades and then target for profits.

You monitor internals and follow-through, using market and volume profiles (a separate discussion) to help determine if the market is likely to trend higher, lower, or sideways. 

You need a consistently applied process to be successful day trading or even swing trading. All of the variables discussed above outline my approach and are also components of the Navigator Algorithms™.

I publish my levels at 7 am for subscribers to the new Active Trader Subscription. Subscribers also get access to our Pro Trading Room, where you can watch me use and trade these levels and learn twice a week.

Click the button below to learn more.

A.F. Thornton

Word of mouth is crucial for growing our trading community and providing education and support for our trading decisions. Please feel free to share this with your friends and family if you find the information beneficial.

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AF Thornton

Website: https://tradingarchimedes.com

A.F. "Arthur" Thornton is an expert in logic, risk/reward quantification, market fractals, pattern recognition and asset class behavioral analysis with 34 years devoted to developing algorithmic and quantitative trading systems. In addition to trading his own capital, Mr. Thornton designs custom algorithmic and quantitative trading systems for a small and exclusive group of exceptionally qualified traders.

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