July 2005Trading Tip:
Opening Price Principle Larry Pesavento's Method by Howard
Arrington
At Ensign's highly successful training seminar in Salt Lake City,
Larry
Pesavento taught his 'Opening Price Principle', which can be
summarized with the following rules. This trading method
can to be used with active NASDAQ and NYSE stocks trading above $20.
- Determine the trading range for the first hour after the day
session open.
- After one hour of trading, if the current price is below the
open, look to sell short, or
if the current price is above the
open, look to buy long.
- The Buy Long entry price is 0.618 of the 1st hour range down
from the 1st hour high.
- The Sell Short entry price is 0.618 of the 1st hour range up
from the 1st hour low.
- If filled, hold the trade to the end of the day and then
exit. Trades are not kept overnight.
- A protective stop is placed at one half of yesterday's range
offset from the entry price.
The Opening Price Principle is based on a statistic that the
opening price is within 25% of the high or low of the daily range
65% of the time. Therefore, use this statistic to your
advantage by trading in the direction of the market in relation to
the opening price. When the market is trading below the open,
a short position will be taken. When the market is trading
above the open, a long position will be taken.
Additional examples of this principle will be illustrated.
But before getting there, the Opening Price Principle can be
automated using the Design Your Own™ study in Ensign Windows.
Three DYO set-ups will be shown, and then used to evaluate the
Opening Price Principle on several charts.
Line A compares the bar's time with 10:30. The
charts shown use Eastern Time, so 10:30 is one hour after the 9:30
open time. Edit the numbers on Line A and on Line F to reflect
the time zone used by your charts. The Boolean result of
the test on Line A is stored in GV [14] for later use, such as by
Line B.
Line B tests the Boolean result from Line A. If
the time is during the 1st hour of trading, the evaluation is
aborted. The balance of the DYO is evaluated only when
the time is after the 1st hour of trading.
Line C finds the High in the first 60 minutes of
trading and stores this 60-min High in GV [10]. Line D finds the
Low in the first 60 minutes of trading and stores this 60-min Low in
GV [11]. Line E stores the Day Session Open in GV [12]. Line F
and G find the Close of the 10:30 bar and store this 60-min Close in
GV [13].
Lines H, I and J find the range for Yesterday and
store yesterday's half range value in GV [22].
The values needed to compute the entry price levels
and stops have been found and stored in Global Variables for use by
the following two DYOs.
Line A tests the 1st hour time condition previously
stored in GV [14] and aborts if the time is ahead of 10:30.
Line B tests whether the Close in [13] is above the
Open in [12] and stores the Boolean result in GV [1].
Line C looks a the Line B result and aborts execution when the Close
is below the Open. Line B will also color the background of a
Buy day with the light green color. Uncheck the Show box on
Line B to remove this background coloring.
Line D calculates the Buy Long entry
price. Value is the High in [10] and Next is the Low in
[11]. 0.618 of this range is subtracted from the
High. The Buy Long entry price is stored in GV [23] and
plotted on the chart as a thick Green line. The entry
price and the word 'Buy' will show in the right side margin for the
current day.
Line E calculates the Stop price by subtracting half
of yesterday's range stored in [22] from the entry price in
[23]. The stop level is plotted on the chart as a fat blue
bar, which will be below the Buy Long entry price line.
The Stop line is also labeled in the right side margin with its
price and the word 'Stop'.
The 3rd DYO is a mirror image of the previous
DYO. It tests for the Close price in [13] being below the Open
price in [12], and computes the Sell Short entry price and the
protective Stop price. The Sell Short entry price is
shown on the chart using a thick Red line and labeled with its price
and the word 'Sell' in the margin. The Stop line is shown in
Blue.
A template for the Opening Price Principle containing
these three DYOs can be downloaded from the Ensign web site using
the Internet Services form. The name of the template is
OpeningPrice.
Obviously, the initial example was hand picked to be
an excellent example of the Opening Price Principle. It
does not happen so perfectly every day. Often the market does
not retrace to the entry price level and your Limit Order is never
filled, as in the following example chart.
There will be days when the protective stop is touched
and the trade is stopped out with a loss, as shown in the next
example. One should consider moving the Stop to
break-even after a sufficient profit has been achieved.
On other days, the exit at the end of the day will be
with either a small gain or a small loss, as illustrated in the next
chart.
The Opening Price Principle has merit and is worth
your consideration and further investigation. Consider the
following charts illustrating when the Opening Price Principle
resulted in a successful day-trade.
As a quick and simple investigation, I picked 10 stock
symbols without any foreknowledge of how they have performed during
the month of July and summarized the results of the Opening Price
Principle in the following table. 'NT' will mean 'No
Trade'. Though the direction was correct for the day,
the market did not have a retracement sufficient to get a fill on
the limit order. Thus the method missed the ensuing
directional move.
'LT' will indicate a 'Late Trade' which probably would
not have been taken because too little time remained in the day for
a good trade to develop. 'BE' indicates the stop should
have been moved to break even, in my opinion, after being
sufficiently profitable during the day.
The numbers are an estimated win (green) or loss (red)
shown in pennies as the spread between the exit price and the entry
price. A 'L' indicates a Long Position was taken. A 'S'
indicates a Short Position was taken.
July |
MSFT |
YHOO |
GOOG |
VRSN |
FLSH |
SLAB |
AMZN |
AMGN |
IBM |
GE |
1 |
-16 L |
NT |
NT |
+38 S |
+21 S |
+50 S |
+23 S |
NT |
+0 L |
-10 L |
5 |
NT |
NT |
NT |
LT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
-14 S |
6 |
-21 L |
NT |
NT |
NT |
+43 L |
-9 L |
-9 L |
NT |
NT |
-19 L |
7 |
-2 S |
NT |
NT |
NT |
+69 L |
NT |
-9 L |
NT |
NT |
-21 S |
8 |
+44 L |
+3 S |
-52 S |
BE |
NT |
+78 L |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
11 |
+12 L |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
+21 L |
NT |
+10 L |
+13 S |
-2 L |
12 |
NT |
+12 L |
+92 S |
+8 S |
NT |
BE |
NT |
+55 L |
+64 L |
-19 S |
13 |
+10 L |
+12 L |
NT |
+64 S |
-29 S |
NT |
-18 S |
+44 S |
NT |
+5 L |
14 |
NT |
NT |
+485 S |
NT |
-29 L |
-51 L |
+23 L |
+113 L |
+29 L |
NT |
15 |
NT |
NT |
-30 L |
+75 S |
+26 L |
-31 S |
NT |
BE |
LT |
-26 S |
18 |
+18 S |
+5 L |
-195 S |
NT |
-22 L |
NT |
+15 L |
-69 S |
+15 S |
-20 L |
19 |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
NT |
BE |
NT |
-63 L |
+90 S |
NT |
20 |
-12 S |
NT |
+700 L |
-38 S |
NT |
-20 S |
+54 L |
NT |
NT |
-6 S |
21 |
+11 L |
NT |
+170 S |
NT |
-31 L |
LT |
-44 L |
-185 S |
-22 S |
+22 S |
22 |
NT |
-6 S |
NT |
-2 S |
+15 S |
NT |
LT |
LT |
+24 L |
NT |
25 |
-8 L |
-2 S |
NT |
NT |
NT |
+12 L |
LT |
+0 S |
NT |
NT |
26 |
+16 S |
-10 S |
+0 S |
+0 L |
-4 S |
NT |
-58 L |
+85 L |
BE |
-18 L |
27 |
+12 L |
-6 S |
-142 S |
+44 L |
NT |
-22 S |
+147 L |
+58 S |
-25 S |
LT |
Net |
+64 |
+8 |
+1028 |
+189 |
+59 |
+28 |
+124 |
+48 |
+188 |
-128 |
Statistics |
Value |
Number of symbols examined |
10 |
Number of days examined in July |
18 |
Number of Long Positions taken |
49 |
Number of Short Positions taken |
48 |
Number of winning trades |
48 |
Number of losing trades |
45 |
Number of break even trades |
9 |
Number of No Trade days |
71 |
Number of Late Trade days (no trade) |
7 |
Sum of the winning day amounts |
3055 |
Sum of the losing day amounts |
1447 |
Ratio of the $ made to $ lost |
2.1 |
Though the method appears to be profitable, the area of the No
Trade days is of great interest to me. These are directional
days where the direction was correctly called, but the position was
not established because the market did not retrace to the entry
price. Further research is needed to see if it would be
profitable to establish half of one's position immediately using the
10:30 closing price, and the other half of the position at the entry
price calculated by the Opening Price Principle. Perhaps this
type of research can be published in a future Trading Tips issue.
I hope you enjoyed this article about Larry Pesavento's Opening
Price Principle as I understand it after having been exposed to it
at the Ensign training seminar.
See the follow up article on the Opening Price Principle in the
August
2005 Trading Tips Newsletter. |