Sniffer System

hiii friend
i had found sniffer trading system with help of this system i do very well since last year. so i put here may be help full for new baby
My core strategy is ....buy dips during uptrends, short rallies during downtrends. I work entirely from weekly charts and I spend about an hour or so each week in analysing the market. I rarely look at the market during the week, and if I do its only to see how a trade is going....I don't do any analysis or make any decisions from daily charts.
I do no fundamental analysis except to let the weekly trend give me some idea of the soundness or otherwise of a company's fundamentals.
I can't remember the last time I looked at the financial pages or read a company report or a broker's newsletter.
I have no use for either trend lines or volume analysis. I don't look for the dozens of chart patterns that get so much coverage....I'm mainly interested in trends and retracements.
The refinements I've made in the last year or so have been to use a trend strength indicator to ensure that I'm trading not just trends, but STRONG trends. Also I now use the scanner in Market Analyst to streamline the selection process. For a long time the Market Analyst scanner was very second rate, but over the last year or so its undergone major surgery and is now very good and very simple to use.
I've also changed my moving averages, but this has been more for entertainment value than for practical purposes.
I use the CCI indicator on a setting of 3 to find pullbacks (or rallies during a downtrend). The CCI is purely to give the scanner something to search for...if I was eyeballing each chart I'd visually identify the pullbacks without using an indicator like CCI.
I trade only the blue chips....there are plenty to choose from, more than enough to supply you with plenty of trades even if you follow only bluechips
Far from being the 'slow moving dinosaurs of the stock market', as is commonly believed, many blue chips have posted anywhere between 2 and 10 times the gain of the overall market in recent times. Some have done even better than that.
A trend following system like mine performs best in liquid stocks that tend to trend in a relatively stable manner. The good liquidity enhances the effectivness of stop losses. (stops tend to become less effective in thinly traded stocks.)

The template I put on my WEEKLY charts is...

* 11 period ADX with a horizontal line set at 25.
* 3 period CCI histogram with a horizontal line drawn at the zero level.
* 13 week and 26 week EMA's.
Here's what I do in my once a week analysis each Saturday morning...total time spent is about an hour to analyse all blue chips that I follow
First, check the WEEKLY chart of the All Ords
If the 13 EMA is above the 26 EMA, both are rising and pulling further apart, and the tops and bottoms of the price action are getting progressively higher, then you know the overall market is bullish and you ABSOLUTELY MUST trade ONLY long positions.
The mirror image of these rules apply to identify a downtrend. If the overall market is downtrending, you ABSOLUTELY MUST trade ONLY short positions.
I cannot overstate the benefits of being in tune with the overall market...its VERY important.
With just a couple of mouse clicks the stocks picked by this scan can be put into a separate workbook. My weekly template is put on these stocks. Now I look at each stock one by one, but at this stage I'm only interested in the ADX, not the price action. As each chart comes up I'm looking at the bottom right corner of the screen to see if the ADX is above the horizontal line which is set at 25. It takes only a one second glance to check the ADX reading, and if its not strong enough, a further two seconds to put the next chart up on the screen. It sounds inconceivable that you can check out a new chart every three seconds, but remember that the process so far has been mainly to weed out the undesirables rather than to pick the winners.
If I come across a potential winner (one whose ADX is reading 25 or higher), I then check it's price action, Moving Averages etc, and if it shapes up OK in those areas I transfer it to a workbook which I've called 'Watchlist'....this takes just a couple of mouse clicks.
Out of my workbook of all blue chips the scanner usually finds about 10% - 60 odd stocks, that are giving the CCI signal. At less than 5 seconds per chart it doesn't take long to whiz through this list and cull most of them, and save the best 8 or 10 to a watchlist.

The final selection on the top 8 or 10 is purely visual. If the overall market is bullish I'm looking for the stock to have....
* Higher tops and higher bottoms, 13 EMA above 26 EMA, daylight (space) between the two MA's, both MA's rising and pulling apart.
* ADX reading of 25 or higher.
* Stock must be in the process of a pullback.
ENTRY...
Put a buy stop or a buy limit order 1 tick above the candle that pulls CCI below zero. Lower the buy order each week if necessary to just above the top of the last candle. If/when the uptrend resumes, your entry order will be filled.
OR
For a more conservative entry, put the buy order 1 tick above the first bullish candle following the pullback.
All buy orders are placed on a GTC (good till cancelled) basis.

STOP LOSS...
Attach an 'If done' stop loss order to your buy order. If your buy order is done (filled), your stop loss will automatically be put in place.
I like to place the stop somewhere between 8% to 10% from entry, but I've used a 5% stop on occasion. 8 to 10% gives the market a bit of room to fluctuate without stopping you out.
For long positions its prudent to pay a small extra charge to use a GSO (guaranteed stop loss order), if your broker offers this facility. A GSO is designed to protect you against a severe price slump that could gap past your stop loss order.

TRAILING STOPS.
As the trend moves in our favour we need to progressively lock in profit. I do this by moving my stop up to just below each swing low on the weekly chart. Each swing low is of course preceded by a swing high. When each pullback ends, and the revitalised uptrend moves above the last swing high, then and only then will I move my stop loss up to 2% under the swing low.
I repeat this process each time a higher swing low is made, until finally the trend dies and my stop is hit, and I'm taken out of the trade.
There's one other part to my trailing stop strategy....if a weekly candle penetrates the 26 week EMA, at the start of the next week I'll move my stop up to 2% below the bottom of that candle. A penetration of the 26 EMA can sometimes be a warning that the trend is getting tired, in which case its prudent to take the precautionary action of moving your stop up to just under that candle.
MONEY MANAGEMENT.
2% of my trading capital is the maximum I'm willing to risk on a trade.
SUMMARY.
Use weekly charts exclusively.

Once a week check the weekly trend of the overall market, and trade only in that direction.

Find stocks that are trending in the same direction as the market as a whole, but are currently retracing.

Use the ADX to measure the trend strength of these stocks.

Buy these stocks as they finish their retracement and resume their trend.

ALWAYS place a stop loss order, and make it a guaranteed stop loss if you're trading long.

Use trailing stops to progressively lock in profits as the trend moves your way, and to take you out of the trade when the trend dies.

Use the 2% money management rule to prevent serious depletion of your trading capital from a losing trade.

If the overall market is bearish, use the mirror image of the system to go short in bearish stocks.
CONCLUSION.
By cutting losing trades quickly and letting winning trades run as long as the trend remains healthy, by trading only in strongly trending stocks, and by trading only in the direction of the overall market, this system virtually ensures an acceptable ratio of winning trades to losing trades, and that the average profit will be considerably

dear friend,

i would like to know one thing. ADX(11) you use for selection of stocks. If a stock's ADX is above 25, you prefer to put that on the watch list if MA, Price action etc. are OK, But, what is the use of CCI(3)? Is it for selection of stocks as is done by ADX or placement of a buy signal?

Please clarify this doubt.

Regards,

Nick
 

kenneth

Well-Known Member
Code:
Ticker	Date/Time	FMA	BUY	Target1	Target2	Target3	Volume	
APOLLOHOSP7/9/2008	491.16	504.35	534.51	558.40	590.25	1051189	
CADILAHC7/9/2008	309.99	320.30	358.82	385.79	421.74	12777	
INFOSYSTCH7/9/2008	1757.94	1821.90	1983.77	2105.40	2267.57	1875628
 

kenneth

Well-Known Member
Code:
Ticker	Date/Time	FMA	BUY	Target1	Target2	Target3	Volume	
CADILAHC7/22/2008	309.41	309.75	342.00	363.61	392.43	28540	
COROMNFERT7/22/2008	122.07	125.00	144.57	158.71	177.55	709352	
I-FLEX	7/22/2008	1369.37	1373.35	1607.74	1756.99	1956.00	149367	
NBVENTURES7/22/2008	256.42	261.00	310.41	343.73	388.16	45721
 
Mr kenneth seems to be doing a fine job . Thanks due to him. However I would like to request him to post the AFL so that a scanning could be done on weekly basis . Waiting for favourable response .

Grorich
 

kenneth

Well-Known Member
Thanks Growrich. As the market were down not many stocks were above the required parameters.Hence there was no post.There is no single AFL. This scan the stocks which are above 13-26MAs and ADX11>25 scanned with weekly period. Can you write this simple AFL and then read the first post and we will go to thenext stage.

Code:
Ticker	Date/Time	Buy	ADX11	Sell	Close	ADX11	CCI	
ABIRLANUVO8/14/2008	0	1	0	1339.350	27	100	
ACC	8/14/2008	0	1	0	609.550	40	57	
ASHOKLEY8/14/2008	0	1	0	32.950	28	74	
ATLANTA	8/14/2008	0	1	0	165.350	53	54	
AUROPHARMA8/14/2008	0	1	0	311.100	33	74	
FSL	8/14/2008	0	1	0	41.600	98	100	
HDFCBANK8/14/2008	0	1	0	1174.800	28	50	
JETAIRWAYS8/14/2008	0	1	0	492.950	35	100	
M&M	8/14/2008	0	1	0	585.400	42	90	
MARICO	8/14/2008	0	1	0	62.700	26	100	
MID-DAY	8/14/2008	0	1	0	27.250	26	100	
MUDRA	8/14/2008	0	1	0	37.800	98	99	
NIFTYBEES8/14/2008	0	1	0	450.910	26	52	
PRITHVI	8/14/2008	0	1	0	150.600	29	66	
SRTRANSFIN8/14/2008	0	1	0	347.100	26	100	
SUNDRMFAST8/14/2008	0	1	0	27.100	28	65	
ULTRACEMCO8/14/2008	0	1	0	619.300	28	66	
UNITY	8/14/2008	0	1	0	444.200	36	57
Regards
ken
 

kenneth

Well-Known Member
Hi Mayavi,

Looks like you are looking for something like this.

Code:
Ticker	Date/Time	FMA	BUY	Target1	Target2	Target3	Volume	
INFOSYSTCH8/14/2008	1663.42	1693.50	1843.52	1953.43	2099.97	2047007	
STAR	8/14/2008	175.11	181.05	202.21	217.67	238.28	64388	
SUNPHARMA8/14/2008	1440.99	1452.55	1542.79	1602.04	1681.05	162223
Regards
ken
 
Last edited:

mayavi99

Well-Known Member
Thank you Kenneth. I saw that post of yours in the other thread too. I don't find that much time to sit here and learn the fundas of TA, though I very much love to do so.
 

kenneth

Well-Known Member
Code:
Ticker	Date/Time	FMA	BUY	ResBot	peak	Target1	ResTop	Volume	
CADILAHC8/18/2008	329.51	330.15	332.38	346.90	362.67	409.79	7333	
DHAMPUR	8/18/2008	63.39	64.10	66.90	67.80	72.88	97.06	74233	
HINDUNI8/18/2008	241.11	241.50	248.38	254.90	259.48	309.18	1096643	
KAJARIA8/18/2008	34.30	34.50	50.47	35.00	38.31	56.76	36457	
LGBROS	8/18/2008	15.17	15.60	28.73	16.40	17.68	32.12	114039	
ROLTA	8/18/2008	309.66	325.60	351.45	343.00	350.24	405.55	1187656	
ZENSART	8/18/2008	141.41	147.05	146.56	130.00	159.71	169.51	86872
Regards
Ken
 

riser3

Active Member
Code:
a = ma(CLOSE, 13 );
b = ma(CLOSE, 26 );
c= adx(11);

d= b-a;

buy = 0;
sell = 0;

result = iif (c>25,1,0);
if (result=0)
{
filter = d<b;
}

addcolumn(Close,"Close price");
I wrote an code which i think satisfies as an afl
Please say if some parameters are wrong; I'm nill on parameters
-----------------------------------------
works by clicking; explore to be saved as afl
 

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