Trading Based on Volume and Price



This video is the recording of our webinar with Dr. John Keppler of Strategic Trading on February 5th, 2015. To learn more for Dr. Keppler, visit his Trader Kingdom expert page here: http://bit.ly/1A1ER6M ------------------------------ Dr. Keppler's Most Popular Trader Kingdom Article: How Much Money Can You Expect To Make Trading - http://bit.ly/1LwxHhG ------------------------------ Volume is the fuel that moves markets. On any given chart, traders will find a number of key price levels that have garnered far more activity than others. These key price levels become important reference points on the chart helping traders to understand the flow of volume, market sentiment and the dominance of sellers or buyers. Join Dr. John Keppler for this live online webcast introducing the advanced tools and indicators used by market profile professionals. The concepts and strategies presented in this event are used every day by professional traders in order to stay on the right side of the market. Topics to be discussed include: How to use volume to identify key price levels on a chart Using volume points of control to determine key support & Resistance levels Developing strategies based on the flow of volume Using market volume activity to help guide trading decisions Dr. John Keppler is the director of the strategic trading educational program at the American Institute for Professional Training and Development, Inc. He has been a business professor and a strategic trader for over twenty years teaching at the University Of Utah School Of Business, the University of California, the College of Notre Dame and the University of Baltimore. As a business professor, Dr. Keppler is well grounded in both in fundamental and technical market analysis techniques and his trading experience includes: Stocks, ETFs, Futures, Forex, Options and Commodities. Utilizing his trading knowledge and educational background, he has developed strategic trading educational programs to help guide traders and investors through the maze of financial markets.

Comments

  1. volume bars are not limited you just want to know the market mechanics behind it, @ 20:45 the up bar next to the one down is on low volume and closes on the highs this is a test spring meaning there is no selling pressure the previous one was a wide range down bar closes off low with that test spring the information here is no selling in the market when that spring closes on high with volume low or less than prev 2 that means it's a test the volume is low bcoz the previous bar did not load that spring with selling, if you see the wide down bar before the spring it was on increase in volume and that means there is a mix between buying and selling the close rejects the low means there must be buying overcoming selling or how you close off the low or atleast the spring wouldn't close as vaccum it would close in the mid and what i mean by vaccum is closing on the high if there still supply that spring is not going to close on the highs so u will assume there is a great amount of demand in that big volume but u have to unload the remaining supply in that big down bar and that's why the spring bar made a lower low but there was a shut down effect because of the early buying that came in down bar on the big volume so that what i call it transfer effect or load transfer now the market is strong and if you moved to another lower time frame you will see another sign of strength which will correlate with that strength in the back ground
  2. at 18.03 we are looking a the "very important VPOC" position in relation to the bar. On the blue arrow bar it is at the top and "there is therefore clearly an intent to keep buying". Incidentally there is, but had we looked at 60 mn bars, suddenly, the VPOC would have been on the same level or the consecutive ones shown in the next 30 mn bar and this suddenly doesn't show anything very interesting anymore and no more "intent".I am a big order flow based trader and Volumes are obviously the key of the whole jigsaw, but looking at in in bar where different conclusion can be drawn with the same data looking at different time frames, doesn't make much sense to me, and this has nothing to do with Trading but pure logical sense. More logical to look at daily Volume at price and a DOM.
  3. lol these comments.
    you know this video is good cause it has relatively no views.
  4. i want to use KVT but where can i find? thanks
  5. There is not such a thing like a bearish volume or a bullish volume. the only way they relate is with the slippage. Volume and time creates the slippage. the buyer is in the wait and the seller comes later, then the market will go bull, cuz of the volume traded buy the waiter and the time, this is happening is miliseconds or less. A big player will accept a higher slippage cuz if the volume he is trading is high the market will move aganst him. the same happens with a banch of trades waiting for a sell. There is a little different between this tow situations though ..
  6. You can at least make it concise. the video is too long but the message you're trying to address is quite simple. THanks anyway
  7. if nothing is what the F**k is it, how one is meant to study and practice when nothing is what it seems huh?, we have no chance folks, lets all get a career or stay in is instead.
  8. Thanks so much..this video rocks !


Additional Information:

Visibility: 37306

Duration: 52m 46s

Rating: 154