Showing posts with label Silver Bullet Strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silver Bullet Strategy. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Common Intra-Day Stock Market Patterns and Setups | Cory Mitchell

The US stock market has certain patterns, based on the time of day. These patterns, or tendencies, happen often enough for professional day traders to base their trading around them. One tendency is that the stock market can become less volatile, flatten out, and see less volume in and around the New York Lunch Hour. Many day traders stop trading about half an hour to an hour before this slowdown kicks in and don't trade again until well after the lunch hour, when volatility and volume pick up again.  

9:30 (EST/EDT) : The stock market opens, and there is an initial push in one direction.
 

9:45 : The initial push often sees a significant reversal or pullback. This is often just a short-term shift, and then the original trending direction re-asserts itself.

 Six Intraday Templates and Trading Setups for the S&P, Nasdaq and Dow Jones.

10:00
: If the trend that began at 9:30 is still in play, it will often be challenged around this time. This tends to be another time where there is a significant reversal or pullback

True Open, 6 Hour Cycle, 90 Minute Cycle, and 22.5 Minute Cycle.

11:15
11:30
: The market is heading into the lunch hour, and London is getting ready to close. This is when volatility will typically die out for a couple hours, but often the daily high or low will be tested around this time. European traders usually close out positions or accumulate a position before they finish for the day. Whether the highs or lows are tested or not, the market tends to "drift" for the next hour or more. 
 
11:4513:30 : This is lunch time in New York, plus a bit of a time buffer. Usually, this is the quietest time of the day, and often, day traders like to avoid it.


13:30
14:00
: If the lunch hour was calm, then expect a breakout of the range established during lunch hour. Often, the market will try to move in the direction it was trading in before the lunch hour doldrums set in. 
 
14:0014:45 : The close is getting closer, and many traders are trading with the trend, thinking it will continue into the close. That may happen, but expect some sharp reversals around this time, because on the flip side, many traders are quicker to take profits or move their trailing stops closer to the current price.


15:00
and 15:30
: These are big "shakeout" points, in that they will force many traders out of their positions. If a reversal of the prior trend occurs around this time, then the price is likely to move very strongly in the opposite direction. Even if the prior trend does sustain itself through these periods, expect some quick and sizable counter-trend moves. 
 

As a day trader, it is best to be nimble and not get tied to one position or one direction. It can be very hard to hold a trade for very long between 3 p.m. and the close.
The last hour of trading is the second most volatile hour of the trading day. Many day traders only trade the first hour and last hour of the trading day.

15:58 16:00 : The market closes at 16:00. After that, liquidity dries up in nearly all stocks and ETFs, except for the very active ones. It's common to close all positions a minute or more before the closing bell, unless you have orders placed to close your position on a closing auction or "cross."


Big
News Events can throw a wrench in these tendencies, resulting in big trends, reversals, or movement through the lunch hour or other times that would be uncommon without some sort of external catalyst. 

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

ICT Silver Bullet Strategy | Darya Filipenka

The ICT Silver Bullet Strategy is a time-based, algorithmic trading model applicable across asset classes. For the 10 AM Silver Bullet setup, concentrate on the 10:00–11:00 AM window. Use fair value gaps in conjunction with Fibonacci levels to refine entries and adjust stop placement. Target a minimum 3R risk-to-reward ratio, and close all positions by 11:00 AM to optimize profit capture while limiting exposure to market uncertainty.
 

3:00 AM - 4:00 AM New York Time
A Silver Bullet trade setup begins with a clear directional move, either upward or downward, establishing initial market intent. Following this move, a Fair Value Gap (FVG) is formed—this imbalance is a key component of the setup and serves as the primary area of interest.
Next, look for a Market Structure Shift (MSS) occurring after liquidity has been taken. An MSS represents a decisive reversal in price delivery, where the market shifts from its prior direction to the opposite. This typically happens when price sweeps previous short-term highs or lows within a trend. For validity, the shift should be impulsive and accompanied by displacement, signaling strong intent from institutional participants.
Displacement refers to a rapid and forceful price move driven by significant capital, often leaving behind additional Fair Value Gaps. This confirms momentum and reinforces the likelihood of a directional change.
Entry is executed within the identified Fair Value Gap, aligning with the new directional bias established by the MSS and displacement.
For targets, focus on liquidity pools such as Asian session highs/lows or higher timeframe premium and discount levels. These areas provide logical exit points where price is likely to rebalance or react. 

10:00 AM - 11:00 AM New York Time

Begin by referencing the previous New York PM session as your primary contextual anchor. During the first 30 minutes after the 9:30 AM market open, assess whether price is trading near that PM range. If price is not in proximity, shift focus to the London Session raid (2:00–5:00 AM, visible on the ETH chart). This comparison helps establish whether the market is drawing toward prior liquidity or operating in a different context.

Within that initial 30-minute window, determine where price stands relative to both the New York PM session and the London session. The market may trend higher, lower, or consolidate—this phase is observational. The actionable setup begins with displacement occurring between 10:00 AM and 11:00 AM EST, which forms the foundation of the Silver Bullet model.

During the 10:00–11:00 AM window: 
Identify a clear, untapped liquidity pool (e.g., equal highs/lows, session highs/lows).
Wait for displacement on lower timeframes (1-, 3-, or 5-minute charts) moving toward that liquidity.
Locate a Fair Value Gap (FVG) formed opposite the direction of the targeted liquidity pool.
Allow price to retrace into the FVG, then enter as price reprices away from it, continuing toward the liquidity target.
Once a valid Market Structure Shift (MSS) is confirmed, refine the entry using an Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) framework. Draw a Fibonacci retracement from the swing low to swing high (for bullish setups) or swing high to swing low (for bearish setups). The optimal entry typically aligns around the 62% retracement level.

For trade management:

First target: -27% Fibonacci extension
Second target: -62% Fibonacci extension

This approach aligns entry precision with institutional order flow while structuring exits around logical liquidity objectives.

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM New York Time
The afternoon Silver Bullet framework begins by focusing on the morning and lunch trading sessions. The objective is to identify AM Session Buy Side Liquidity (BSL) and Sell Side Liquidity (SSL), or Lunch session BSL/SSL, as price transitions into the PM session (1:30 PM–4:00 PM). These liquidity pools establish the context for a potential reversal, with the trade targeting the opposing side of the AM or lunch liquidity.

On Fridays, this model can align with the T.G.I.F. setup, where the target is typically 20–30% of the weekly range, reflecting end-of-week rebalancing behavior.

The execution phase occurs between 2:00 PM and 3:00 PM EST:

Wait for clear displacement, signaling institutional intent and setting up the Silver Bullet condition.
Identify a well-defined, untapped liquidity pool, prioritizing levels formed during the AM and lunch sessions.
Locate a Fair Value Gap (FVG) created by the displacement move.
Allow price to retrace into the FVG, then enter as price exits the imbalance, moving toward the targeted liquidity.

As with the morning model, confirmation comes from a valid Market Structure Shift (MSS) following a liquidity sweep. Typically, the AM session or NY lunch BSL/SSL acts as the liquidity that has been taken, after which displacement and MSS provide the directional bias for the trade.
 
Consider the 6 hour, the 90 minute, and the 22.5 minute cycles.
Expect highs and lows on the 1 minute chart around Micro-Quarter turns.

Reference: