Jigsaw Trading Blog

Jigsaw Trading Review – V4.0.1.0 Beta – Taming The Volatility Tiger

We are happy to announce the release of Jigsaw daytradr V4.0.1.0  Beta. The release includes some very exciting new features, which we’ll detail here. Note, we have attached “Beta” to this because of the number of new charting features. The other new features should be considered non-Beta. Note that we do beta releases to get more exposure to new features to iron out remaining bugs. If that’s not for you, then please stick with version 3.2.2.0 until this one is out of beta.  

Tick Size Compression – Taming The Volatility Tiger
For those that have been watching the markets since COVID, the volatility has been so high, it’s made it challenging to read the order flow, especially for beginners. Even those that aren’t beginners are struggling with markets like NQ – which moves so fast, it often flies off the top of the DOM, or recenters so often that it is hard to follow. The same goes for the footprint charts, even a 5-minute footprint chart covers so many prices, they won’t all fit on your chart. In addition, for those using correlated markets, it allows you to tune markets to the same volatility. This is explained in the following video

 

 

Shortcut Keys

We have added new shortcut keys for moving orders (https://daytradr.jigsawtrading.com/dsshortcut.html)
S + up/down arrow – move stops up/down 1 tick
S + spacebar – move stops to breakeven
L + up/down arrow – move stops up/down 1 tick
S + F1 – move stops to breakeven + 1 tick in the direction of the position (also S + F2, S + F3, S + F4, S + F5) will move 2,3,4,5 ticks

The following video shows them in action:

 

 

Highlighting The Spread

The spread can be seen in the difference between the bid and the offer, but some felt this was still not clear. Again, this is all about volatility and not getting caught out by it. This is not so much on markets like the ES, but certainly on markets like the NQ where the spread can widen and close very rapidly. To make the spread more clear, we have added spread coloring to the price column. It is optional and explained in this video here: 

 

Charting

We have fundamentally changed the way charts work. Previously, if you wanted a 30-second chart, we’d get 1-second data  (cache it) and create 30 seconds bars from that. This was a little heavy CPU-wise, so now we simply request 30-second bars from the feeds. This has allowed us to add in other periodicities like daily charts and tick charts where allowed. Note that for some reason, CQG is not giving us access to tick data right now – a full list of available timeframes is in the manual here, we will continue to grow this over time.

In addition to those, we also have:

New Chart Types

  • Vertex Line
  • Step Chart
  • Colored HLC bar chart
  • Scatterplot
  • Histogram Chart

New Studies/Indicators

  • Bollinger%
  • Guppy Multiple Moving Average
  • IntraDay Momentum Index
  • Moving average cross
  • Performance IDX
  • Twigs Money flow
  • Volatility Cone

We have also significantly improved performance of CQG API using more threads for each individual message type to prevent queueing of messages.

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Order Flow itself is simply information. Just like charts, it can be used in a number of ways, some good and some bad. But let's first break down order flow into it's components so we all agree what we are talking about:

Order Executions/Tape Reading - This aspect is the real flow of orders. It's the information we see in Time & Sales, Footprint Charts, Cumulative Delta. It is looking at market orders, either as they execute or historically. I guess this is the "true order flow". Every trade is a buy and a sell. We look at market orders because we consider them to be more aggressive. When someone trades with a market orders, they are giving up a price to get an instant fill. Limit orders on the other hand just lazily sit there waiting for a market order to hit them. Often these are market makers with no directional conviction. So we see market orders as being more significant.

But we don't use these in isolation.

Volume Profile/Positions - The tape reading part helps us assess various things like momentum, traders getting stuck, balance of trade BUT the volume profile helps us understand where people are positioned and likely to get stopped out. I sometimes call this "Order Flew". It's important to know when trades will be "washed out" - for example - if we have a volume cluster on the S&P500 Futures and the market moves up 100 points and back down to it, it's unlikely short term traders on either side that were positioned there will still be there. But recent, nearby volume helps us assess areas of positions.

Market Depth - The bids and offers, the lazy passive orders waiting to be hit. This is part of the story but in terms of overall importance, I'd put it at around 20% at most. For example - if you return to the high of the day on any market, the offers will be quite large directly above the high. It means nothing at all. It's just a quirk of the market. It does not help you tell if a price will hold. On the other hand, if you see large depth and as we approach it, we see more added to the depth in front of that price, it means others are front running that depth and that is a useful bit of information.

This is the key - it is all just information. Just like price charts are information. When people look at Order Flow, they consider it to be a technique more than a set of information. They look for things like iceberg orders and decide to make a one rule trading system to fade every iceberg, For these people - yes, order flow trading is overrated because they are trying to ignore everything else going on in the markets and construct a trading system a chimp could execute.

For those looking to improve a decent trading approach, the best thing to focus on in Order Flow is momentum. Once you can read momentum you can:

  • Avoid getting into positions when momentum is against you.
  • Confirm trades are working after entry when momentum goes your way.
  • Exit trades in profit when momentum fades.

That's perhaps the easiest way to use order flow because momentum is easier to read. It's about the market continuing to do what it's already doing. On the other hand, reading a turn in the market with order flow takes a higher level of skill and a little longer to learn.

Order flow can't put lipstick on a pig. It won't help you 'improve' something that doesn't work anyway, which is why whenever someone calls me, the first thing I ask is what they are currently doing and we discuss whether they need a reset or whether it will actually help.

When Jigsaw started back in 2011 - we were one of the first in the space and certainly had the best education. It was always going to attract the underbelly of the trading education/tools world and now we see stuff out there that is so complex but so impressive and futuristic that new traders are drawn to it like moths to a flame.

So here's my advice when looking at Order Flow

  • Order Flow can't improve something that doesn't work.
  • Order Flow can be used on it's own, without charts to enter and exit the market but you also have to be able to recognize different market states that need different/altered setups. There is nothing magical about this.
  • Don't start jumping at shadows and take 50 trades an hour in your first week looking at Order Flow, be selective. It can be exciting to see cause and effect play out in front of you for the first time but don't overtrade.
  • Do drills to learn how to read it before you trade it.
  • Markets can only go up and down. Don't overcomplicate it. If you have too many Order Flow tools on your screen - you will not be able to make consistent decisions. Less is more.
  • Take time to choose a market with a pace you like. Interest rates might send you to sleep, the DAX might give you a heart attack.

It is hard to see how a set of information could be overrated. It is true that some methods of presenting this information are better than others. It is also true that some people simply get on better with different tools (e.g. Footprint vs DOM).

There's a middle ground between complexity and simplicity that will leave you making consistent decisions where you improve over time. For those people, Order Flow will be way underrated because they will be the one's getting the most out of it.

Those that jump in with both feet on day one and those that have 100 different tools up, for those, it's a painful experience.

Keep it simple and manageable. Start with momentum reading and build from there. You will never look back.

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