bear 发表于 2005-10-10 17:04

三重滤网交易系统更新版(短中期两套)

三重滤网交易系统更新版--送给抵制日货的汇民

TRIPLE SCREEN UPDATE
One of the most pleasant encounters that occur several times each year is when a trader comes up to me at some conference and tells me how he started trading for a living after studying my book or participating in a Camp. At that point, he may be living and trading on a mountaintop, and as often as not he owns the mountaintop. I noticed long ago that half-way through our conversation these people become slightly apologetic. They tell me they use Triple Screen, but not exactly the way I taught it. They may have modified an indicator, added another screen, substituted a tool, and so forth. Whenever I hear that, I know I am talking to a winner.
First of all, I tell them they owe their success primarily to themselves. I did not teach them any differently than the dozens of others in the same class. Winners have the discipline to take what is offered and use it to succeed. Second, I see their apology for having changed some aspects of my system as an indication of their winning attitude. To benefit from a system, you must test its parameters and fine-tune them until that system becomes your own, even though originally it was developed by someone else. Winning takes discipline, discipline comes from confidence, and the only system in which you can have confidence is the one you have tested on your own data and adapted to your own style.
I developed the Triple Screen trading system in the mid-1980s and first presented it to the public in 1986 in an article in Futures magazine.
I updated it in Trading for a Living and several videos. Here I will review it, focusing on recent enhancements.
What is a trading system? What’s the difference between a method, a system, and a technique?
A method is a general philosophy of trading. For example; trade with the
trend, buy when the trend is up, and sell after it tops out. Or—buy
undervalued markets, go long near historical support levels, and sell
after resistance zones have been reached.
A system is a set of rules for implementing a method. For example, if our
method is to follow trends, then the system may buy when a multi-week
moving average turns up and sell when a daily moving average turns down (get in slow, get out fast). Or—buy when the weekly MACDHistogram
ticks up and sell after it ticks down.
A technique is a specific rule for entering or exiting trades. For example,
when a system gives a buy signal, the technique could be to buy when
prices exceed the high of the previous day or if prices make a new low during the day but close near the high.
The method of Triple Screen is to analyze markets in several timeframes
and use both the trend-following indicators and oscillators. We make a strategic decision to trade long or short using trend-following indicators on long-term charts. We make tactical decisions to enter or exit using oscillators on shorter-term charts. The original method has not changed, but the system—the exact choice of indicators—has evolved over the years, as have the techniques.
Triple Screen examines each potential trade using three screens or tests. Each screen uses a different timeframe and indicators. These screens filter out many trades that seem attractive at first. Triple Screen promotes a careful and cautious approach to trading.
Conflicting Indicators
Technical indicators help identify trends or turns more objectively than
chart patterns. Just keep in mind that when you change indicator
parameters, you influence their signals. Be careful not to fiddle with
indicators until they tell you what you want to hear.
We can divide all indicators into three major groups:
Trend-following indicators help identify trends. Moving averages,
MACD lines, Directional system, and others rise when the markets are
rising, decline when markets fall, and go flat when markets enter trading
ranges.
Oscillators help catch turning points by identifying overbought and
oversold conditions. Envelopes or channels, Force Index, Stochastic,
Elder-ray, and others show when rallies or declines outrun themselves
and are ready to reverse.
Miscellaneous indicators help gauge the mood of the market crowd.
Bullish Consensus, Commitments of Traders, New High–New Low Index,
and others reflect the general levels of bullishness or bearishness in
the market.
Different groups of indicators often give conflicting signals. Trendfollowing
indicators may turn up, telling us to buy, while oscillators
become overbought, telling us to sell. Trend-following indicators may
turn down, giving sell signals, while oscillators become oversold, giving
buy signals. It is easy to fall into the trap of wishful thinking and
start following those indicators whose message you like. A trader must
set up a system that takes all groups of indicators into account and
handles their contradictions.
Conflicting Timeframes
An indicator can call an uptrend and a downtrend in the same stock on
the same day. How can this be? A moving average may rise on a weekly
chart, giving a buy signal, but fall on a daily chart, giving a sell signal.
It may rally on an hourly chart, telling us to go long, but sink on a 10-
minute chart, telling us to short. Which of those signals should we take?
Amateurs reach for the obvious. They grab a single timeframe, most
often daily, apply their indicators and ignore other timeframes. This
works only until a major move swells up from the weeklies or a sharp
spike erupts from the hourly charts and flips their trade upside down.
Whoever said that ignorance was bliss was not a trader.
People who have lost money with daily charts often imagine they
could do better by speeding things up and using live data. If you cannot
make money with dailies, a live screen will only help you lose
faster. Screens hypnotize losers, but a determined one can get even closer
to the market by renting a seat and going to trade on the floor. Pretty
soon a margin clerk for the clearing house notices that the new trader’s
equity has dropped below limit. He sends a runner into the pit who
taps that person on the shoulder. The loser steps out and is never seen
again—he has “tapped out.”
The problem with losers is not that their data is too slow, but their
decision-making process is a mess. To resolve the problem of conflicting
timeframes, you should not get your face closer to the market, but
push yourself further away, take a broad look at what’s happening,
make a strategic decision to be a bull or a bear, and only then return
closer to the market and look for entry and exit points. That’s what
Triple Screen is all about.
What is long term and what is short term? Triple Screen avoids rigid
definitions by focusing instead on the relationships between timeframes.
It requires you to begin by choosing your favorite timeframe,
which it calls intermediate. If you like to work with daily charts, your
intermediate timeframe is daily. If you are a day-trader and like fiveminute
charts, then your intermediate timeframe is the five-minute
chart, and so on.
Triple Screen defines the long term by multiplying the intermediate
timeframe by five (see “Time—The Factor of Five,” page 87). If your
intermediate timeframe is daily, then your long-term timeframe is weekly.
If your intermediate timeframe is five minutes, then your long-term is
half-hourly, and so forth. Choose your favorite timeframe, call it intermediate,
and immediately move up one order of magnitude to a
long-term chart. Make your strategic decision there, and return to the
intermediate chart to look for entries and exits.
The key principle of Triple Screen is to begin your analysis by stepping
back from the markets and looking at the big picture for strategic
decisions. Use a long-term chart to decide whether you are bullish or
bearish, and then return closer to the market to make tactical choices
about entries and exits.

bear 发表于 2005-10-10 17:05

第一套(用于中长线交易)
The Principles of Triple Screen
Triple Screen resolves contradictions between indicators and timeframes.
It reaches strategic decisions on long-term charts, using trendfollowing
indicators—this is the first screen. It proceeds to make
tactical decisions about entries and exits on the intermediate charts,
using oscillators—this is the second screen. It offers several methods
for placing buy and sell orders—this is the third screen, which we may
implement using either intermediate- or short-term charts.
Begin by choosing your favorite timeframe, the one with whose
charts you like to work, and call it intermediate. Multiply its length by
five to find your long-term timeframe. Apply trend-following indicators
to long-term charts to reach a strategic decision to go long, short, or
stand aside. Standing aside is a legitimate position. If the long-term
chart is bullish or bearish, return to the intermediate charts and use
oscillators to look for entry and exit points in the direction of the longterm
trend. Set stops and profit targets before switching to short-term
charts, if available, to fine-tune entries and exits.
SCREEN ONE
Choose your favorite timeframe and call it intermediate. Multiply it by
five to find the long-term timeframe. Let’s say you prefer to work with
daily charts. In that case, move immediately one level higher, to the
weekly chart. Do not permit yourself to peek at the dailies because this
may color your analysis of weekly charts. If you are a day-trader, you
might choose a 10-minute chart as your favorite, call it intermediate,
and then immediately move up to the hourly chart, approximately five
times longer. Rounding off is not a problem; technical analysis is a craft,
not an exact science. If you are a long-term investor, you might choose
a weekly chart as your favorite and then go up to the monthly.
Apply trend-following indicators to the long-term chart and make a
strategic decision to trade long, short, or stand aside. The original version
of Triple Screen used the slope of weekly MACD-Histogram as its
weekly trend-following indicator. It was very sensitive and gave many
buy and sell signals. I now prefer to use the slope of a weekly exponential
moving average as my main trend-following indicator on longterm
charts. When the weekly EMA rises, it confirms a bull move and
tells us to go long or stand aside. When it falls, it identifies a bear
move and tells us to go short or stand aside. I use a 26-week EMA,
which represents half a year of trading. You can test several different
lengths to see which tracks your market best, as you would with any
indicator.
I continue to plot weekly MACD-Histogram. When both EMA and
MACD-Histogram are in gear, they confirm a dynamic trend and encourage
you to trade larger positions. Divergences between weekly
MACD-Histogram and prices are the strongest signals in technical
analysis, which override the message of the EMA.
SCREEN TWO
Return to the intermediate chart and use oscillators to look for trading
opportunities in the direction of the long-term trend. When the weekly
trend is up, wait for daily oscillators to fall, giving buy signals. Buying
dips is safer than buying the crests of waves. If an oscillator gives a sell
signal while the weekly trend is up, you may use it to take profits on
long positions but not to sell short.
When the weekly trend is down, look for daily oscillators to rise,
giving sell signals. Shorting during upwaves is safer than selling new
lows. When daily oscillators give buy signals, you may use them to
take profits on shorts but not to buy. The choice of oscillators depends
on your trading style.
For conservative traders, choose a relatively slow oscillator, such as
daily MACD-Histogram or Stochastic, for the second screen. When the
weekly trend is up, look for daily MACD-Histogram to fall below zero
and tick up, or for Stochastic to fall to its lower reference line, giving
a buy signal.
Reverse these rules for shorting in bear markets. When trendfollowing
indicators point down on the weekly charts, but daily MACDHistogram
ticks down from above its zero line, or Stochastic rallies to
its upper reference line, they give sell signals.
A conservative approach works best during early stages of major
moves, when markets gather speed slowly. As the trend accelerates,
pullbacks become more shallow. To hop aboard a fast-running trend,
you need faster oscillators.
For active traders, use the two-day EMA of Force Index (or longer,
if that’s what your research suggests for your market). When the
weekly trend is up and daily Force Index falls below zero, it flags a
buying opportunity.
Reverse these rules for shorting in bear markets. When the weekly
trend is down and the two-day EMA of Force Index rallies above zero,
it points to shorting opportunities.
Many other indicators can work with Triple Screen. The first screen
can also use Directional System or trendlines. The second screen can
use Momentum, Relative Strength Index, Elder-ray, and others.
The second screen is where we set profit targets and stops and make
a go–no go decision about every trade after weighing the level of risk
against the potential gain.
Set the stops. A stop is a safety net, which limits the damage from any
bad trade. You have to structure your trading in such a way that no
single bad loss, or a nasty series of losses, can damage your account.
Stops are essential for success, but many traders shun them. Beginners
complain about getting whipsawed, stopped out of trades that eventually
would have made them money. Some say that putting in a stop
means asking for trouble because no matter where you put it, it will
be hit.
First of all, you need to place stops where they are not likely to be
hit, outside of the range of market noise (see SafeZone on page 173).
Second, an occasional whipsaw is the price of long-term safety. No
matter how great your analytic skills, stops are always necessary.
You should move stops only one way—in the direction of the trade.
When a trade starts moving in your favor, move your stop to a breakeven
level. As the move persists, continue to move your stop, protecting
some of your paper profit. A professional trader never lets a profit
turn into a loss.
A stop may never expose more than 2% of your equity to the risk of
loss (see Chapter 7, “Money Management Formulas”). If Triple Screen
flags a trade but you realize that a logical stop would risk more than
2% of your equity, skip that trade.
Set profit targets. Profit targets are flexible and depend on your goals
and capital. If you are a well-capitalized, long-term-oriented trader, you
may build up a large position at an early stage of a bull market, repeatedly
taking buy signals from the daily charts, as long as the weekly
trend is up. Take your profits after the weekly EMA turns flat. The reverse
applies to downtrends.
Another option is to take profits whenever prices on the daily
charts hit their channel line. If you go long, sell when prices hit the
upper channel line and look to reposition on the next pullback to the
daily moving average. If you go short, cover when prices fall to their
lower channel line and look to reposition short on the next rally to
the EMA.
A short-term-oriented trader can use the signals of a two-day EMA
of Force Index to exit trades. If you buy in an uptrend when the twoday
EMA of Force Index turns negative, sell when it turns positive. If
you go short in a downtrend after the two-day EMA of Force Index
turns positive, cover when it turns negative.
Beginners often approach markets like a lottery—buy a ticket and sit
in front of the TV to find out whether you have won. You will know
that you are becoming a professional when you start spending almost
as much time thinking about exits as looking for entries.
SCREEN THREE
The third screen helps us pinpoint entry points. Live data can help savvy
traders but hurt beginners who may slip into day-trading.
Use an intraday breakout or pullback to enter trades without realtime
data. When the first two screens give you a buy signal (the weekly
is up, but the daily is down), place a buy order at the high of the previous
day or a tick higher. A tick is the smallest price fluctuation permitted
in any market. We expect the major uptrend to reassert itself and
catch a breakout in its direction. Place a buy order, good for one day
only. If prices break out above the previous day’s high, you will be
stopped in automatically. You do not have to watch prices intraday,
just give your order to a broker.
When the first two screens tell you to sell short (the weekly is down,
but the daily is up), place a sell order at the previous day’s low or a
tick lower. We expect the downtrend to reassert itself, and try to catch
the downside breakout. If prices break below the previous day’s low,
they will trigger your entry.
Daily ranges can be very wide, and placing an order to buy at the
top can be expensive. Another option is to buy below the market. If
you are trying to buy a pullback to the EMA, calculate where that EMA
is likely to be tomorrow and place your order at that level. Alternatively,
use the SafeZone indicator (see page 173) to find how far the market is
likely to dip below its previous day’s low and place your order at that
level. Reverse these approaches for shorting in downtrends.
The advantage of buying upside breakouts is that you follow an
impulse move. The disadvantage is that you buy high and your stop is
far away. The advantage of bottom fishing is that you get your goods
on sale and your stop is closer. The disadvantage is the risk of getting
caught in a downside reversal. A “breakout entry” is more reliable, but
profits are smaller; a “bottom-fishing entry” is riskier, but the profits are
greater. Make sure to test both methods in your markets.
Use real-time data, if available, for entering trades. When the first
two screens give you a buy signal (the weekly is up, but the daily is
down), use live data to get long. You could follow a breakout from
the opening range, when prices rally above the high of the first 15 to
30 minutes of trading, or apply technical analysis to intraday charts
and finesse your entry. When trying to short, you may enter on a
downside breakout from the opening range. You could also monitor
the market intraday and use technical analysis to enter into a short
trade, using live charts.
The techniques for finding buy and sell signals on real-time charts are
the same as on daily charts, only their speed is much higher. If you use
weeklies and dailies to get in, use them also to get out. Once a live chart
gives an entry signal, avoid the temptation to exit using intraday data.
Do not forget that you entered that trade on the basis of weekly and
daily charts, expecting to hold for several days. Do not be distracted by
the intraday chop if you are trading swings that last several days.

[ 本帖最后由 bear 于 2005-10-10 17:11 编辑 ]

bear 发表于 2005-10-10 17:05

第二套(用于日内交易)

SCREEN ONE
Analyze your market on a longer-term chart, using trend-following indicators, and make a strategic decision to trade long, short, or stand aside.
Choose the timeframe you prefer to trade and call it intermediate.
Let us select a five-minute chart for our intermediate timeframe, with each
bar representing five minutes of trading. You can choose a longer chart if you wish, but not much shorter, as that might pit you against institutional
scalpers. To stand completely apart from the crowd, you may select an unorthodox length, such as seven or nine minutes. Some day-traders, intoxicated by the promise of technology, use one-minute or even tick charts. These provide the illusion that you are present on the floor, even though it can easily take half a minute or longer for the data to be keyed in, uploaded to the satellite, and broadcast to your screen. You are not on the floor, you are behind. When markets begin to run, time lags get even worse.
Multiply your intermediate timeframe by five to find the long-termtimeframe. If your intermediate timeframe is five minutes, use a 25-minute chart. If your software does not allow plotting 25-minute charts, round it off to half an hour. A successful trader needs to stand apart from the crowd. This is why it pays to use uncommon parameters for charts and indicators. There are probably thousands of people using half-hourly charts, but only a tiny minority uses 25-minute charts and gets its signals a little faster.
Apply a trend-following indicator to the long-term chart and use its direction to make a strategic decision to trade long, short, or stand aside.
Start with a 20- or 30-bar EMA and adjust its length until it tracks your
market with a minimum of whipsaws. When the 25-minute EMA rises, it
identifies an uptrend and tells you to trade from the long side or stand aside. When the EMA falls, it identifies a downtrend and tells you to trade only from the short side or stand aside. Make a strategic decision on this long-term chart before returning to your intermediate-term charts. Successful day-traders tend to rely less on indicators and more on chart patterns. The gaps between trading days can distort intraday indicators. Still, some indicators, such as moving averages and envelopes, also called channels, are useful even with intraday charts.
SCREEN TWO
Return to the intermediate (five-minute) charts to look for entries in the
direction of the trend.
Plot a 22-bar EMA on the five-minute chart and draw a channel that contains about 95% of price action.
Moving averages reflect the average consensus of value, while channels show the normal limits of bullishness and bearishness. We want to get long during up trends, buying below the EMA on a five-minute chart, and short in downtrends, above the EMA. Do not get long above the upper channel line, where the market is overvalued, or sell short below the lower channel line, where it is undervalued.
Use oscillators, such as MACD-Histogram and Force Index, to identify
overbought and oversold areas.
Trade in the direction of the tide, entering when a wave goes against the tide.
When the 25-minute trend is up, falling prices and oscillators on a five-minute chart reflect a temporary bearish imbalance—a buying opportunity. When the 25-minute trend is down, rising prices and oscillators on a five-minute chart reflect a temporary bullish imbalance—a shorting opportunity. Day-traders sometimes ask whether they should analyze weekly and daily charts. The weekly trend is essentially meaningless for them, and
even the daily is of limited value. Looking at too many timeframes can
lead to “paralysis from analysis.”
Place SafeZone stops.
After entering a trade, place a protective stop,
using the SafeZone method (see page 173). Consider making it “on close
only”; watch the screen and give an order to exit only if the five-minute
bar closes beyond your stop level. This way, a brief penetration caused
by market noise will not touch off a stop. Naturally, there is no bargaining
or waiting for another tick. To be a day-trader, you must have iron discipline!
SCREEN THREE
This screen handles entries and exits.
Enter in the vicinity of a moving average on a five-minute chart.
If the 25-minute trend is up, buy pullbacks to the EMA on a five-minute
chart, especially when oscillators are oversold. Reverse the procedure in downtrends. This is better than chasing breakouts, buying at the highs, or shorting at the lows.
Take profits in the vicinity of the channel line.
If you buy near the moving average, aim to sell near the upper channel line. If your five-minute oscillators, such as MACD-Histogram, are making new highs and related markets are rallying, you may wait for the channel to be
hit or penetrated. If the indicators are weak, grab your profit fast without
waiting for prices to touch the channel.
Measure your performance as the percentage of the channel width.
You must be an A trader to make day-trading worthwhile. Even then,
you have to prove to yourself that you can make more money day trading
than position trading. Try to trade only a few times a day and aim to catch at least a third of that day’s range. Enter cautiously, but run fast. Do not trade during after-hours sessions when markets tend to be very thin.

[ 本帖最后由 bear 于 2005-10-10 17:10 编辑 ]

freedon 发表于 2005-10-10 17:05

哗,英文啊!!老大不会看啊!!

胡夫 发表于 2005-10-10 17:09

我说朋友,你不是让大家伙抵制完日货又去崇拜美国货吧?
好人做到底,给给翻翻吧

bear 发表于 2005-10-10 17:12

翻译很辛苦!

zhengqian 发表于 2005-10-10 17:21

我们看不懂,你的帖子等于无效

mai 发表于 2005-10-10 17:24

也好过没有,总有大量懂的会友受益!

happy88888 发表于 2005-10-10 17:34

能翻译成中文就好拉............

freedon 发表于 2005-10-10 22:06

本人对三重滤网非常感兴趣以,可惜是英文。。。。老大啊,,请翻译啊。。吃粥吃饭就看你了。。。
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