Killer
Trading Apps
EWT’s
TradeZone Tactics
by Joe
Russo, Elliott Wave Technology | February 7, 2010
The Bullish Stampede from March ’09 ends abruptly in January
’10.
Shortly following the Dow’s print high in late
January, it became clear that the markets forward looking mechanism suddenly
shifted into reverse. Well before the
fact, we were alerting subscribers of a looming top in late December or
January.
Turn-bar analysis is one of the ways we keep
members abreast of pivotal market turning points. Back in October of 2009, when most everyone
else was calling for an imminent crash, we alerted our readership that new
highs were likely throughout November and into the dawn of the current
decade.
Once the pullback into December reversed, we made
the case for a top on 11-January 2010.

Here at Elliott Wave Technology, we are big
believers in providing membership with high concentrations of visual
chart-based graphics. As such, charts
drafted for each issue convey clear and actionable forecasting guidance.
This 25-Jan turn-bar chart contains an additional
piece of actionable information, an INSIDE COMPRESSION bar notice. We often include this type of ancillary
technical insight to provide a higher level of preparedness for our readers.

Inside bars occur when the range of a price bar
remains confined within the boundaries of its previous bars range. Inside bars can and do occur across every
timeframe be it daily, monthly, weekly, or intraday.
Inside bars indicate the presence of a temporary
state of compression, which suggests that as the next bar moves above or
beneath the previous bars compressed range, it will release the built-up energy
and continue to move price in the direction of release. Such release of compressed energy is
generally short-term in nature, but in some instances, price moves out of
inside bars may mark intermediate-term reversals from key turn pivots, or an
accelerating continuation of the current trend in force.




Wrapping up our recent tactical outcomes at LEVEL-V
Our last Level-V chart takes us up to date through
Friday’s close. In tandem, both of our
strategies began to sense a bottom on Friday.
So much so, that we booked 337-pts in profits on our shorts from 10300,
and started immediately probing the long side of the market for a reversal to
the upside.
A tad early, we reversed long @ 9963 with
sell-stops to cover at 9909. Well, our
forward looking mechanism was a bit more premature than that of the markets and
we immediately stopped out of those long positions giving back 54-pts in
losses.
The markets forward looking mechanism would not
kick in until an additional 74-pts of downside occurred from the point at which
we stopped out of our long positions.
From the start of this tactical journey on 28-Jan,
through the close of trade on Friday February fifth, it’s safe to say that we
and our subscribers cleaned house at Level-V.
Our MV traders opened their first position on 28-January at 10111, while
IPV members joined the campaign on February 1st at a level of 10149.
All told, our MV traders racked up 384 Dow pts in 5
trades, while our IPV constituents pulled in 434 points of booty in just 3
trades. Now that is not bad for a week’s
worth of controlled speculative risk-taking.
So you’re thinking we got
lucky with LEVEL-V and simply had ourselves a good week
The red lines on the stacked equity graphs to the
right clearly illustrate otherwise.
We have plotted the two equity curves from
inception of Level-V accounting, which began nine months ago in March of
2009. Results measure a starting account
size of 5K, which has traded one single Dow futures contract per signal at the IPV
level.
Though a bit small and perhaps illegible, the upper
graph tracks the growth path in account size, which is now well over 35K. The green line way down at the bottom is the
cost of subscription access to Level-V trading.
The lower equity graph tracks the same IPV
performance, but measures our equity growth in percentage terms from our
starting account size of 5K. Current IPV
level-V returns are knocking at the door of 700%. The gold colored line toward the bottom of
this graph, illustrates the equivalent percentage of growth in the Dow from an
equal starting point.
To be sure, we have had considerable drawdowns,
which reflect in the equity graphs.
Until last week’s killer performance, it appeared that IPV equity was
beginning to crash. Much like the
markets themselves, suddenly and abruptly, everything changed, and we are now
at a fresh all-time-high.
Not the day-trading cowboy
type and simply looking for big-picture guidance
We hear you.
In fact most are not cut out to trade in such a zone. The TradeZone is much like a war zone - even
for long-term investors.
Most are not adequately prepared to handle such
battle, and many suffer various types of post traumatic trading disorders
following exposure to the type of carnage that can be inflicted upon trading
and investment accounts.
Our PTP (Position Traders Perspective) members get the same caliber of easy-to-follow
visual guidance at LEVEL-I as our day-trading warriors get at LEVEL-V. Each chart tells the full story, just like
the one below.

Long-Term investor-types have come to love LEVEL-I
unconditionally
If you are looking for big-picture guidance to
avoid being run over by a freight train, look no further than LEVEL-I guidance
from our PTP publication. In addition to
saving PTP members from crushing losses in the crash of 2008, we also made them
tons of money on the short side amid the catastrophe.
Add to that our all-clear in July ‘09 to cover
shorts and reverse long, then sprinkle that with another advance call to take
more profits and reverse short a breach of 10450 a week before the 10729 print
high, and you end up with a lasting kind of unconditional love from your
constituents. It’s that simple.

Joe Russo
Chief Publisher
and Technical Analyst
Elliott Wave Technology