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BoxToBox by Gurky

Combination of the box theory by Nicolas Darvas and the turtle system.
If the price is above the box, it's long. If the price is below the box, it's short. And follow tags for exit. Simple game plan.
Darvas box theory is a technical tool that allows traders to target stocks with increasing trade volume.
The Darvas box theory is not locked into a specific time period, so the boxes are created by drawing a line along the recent highs and recent lows of the time period the trader is using.
The Darvas box is a trend following system. A trend following system is one that does not try to anticipate a market move. Another way of saying this is that the system is reactive versus predictive.
Darvas would only enter stocks that were in confirmed uptrends and breaking out of consolidation patterns to make new highs. His boxes helped him visualize this while he was on the road dancing for a living.
Essentially, if a stock on his watchlist was bouncing around inside a “price box” of say $35 and $40, then he knew if it broke to $40.50, it was time to buy.
Likewise, if the stock retreated back into the box, it hit his stop loss orders. He wanted to make sure the uptrend was confirmed with higher prices.
If the price is above the box, it's long. If the price is below the box, it's short. And follow tags for exit. Simple game plan.
Darvas box theory is a technical tool that allows traders to target stocks with increasing trade volume.
The Darvas box theory is not locked into a specific time period, so the boxes are created by drawing a line along the recent highs and recent lows of the time period the trader is using.
The Darvas box is a trend following system. A trend following system is one that does not try to anticipate a market move. Another way of saying this is that the system is reactive versus predictive.
Darvas would only enter stocks that were in confirmed uptrends and breaking out of consolidation patterns to make new highs. His boxes helped him visualize this while he was on the road dancing for a living.
Essentially, if a stock on his watchlist was bouncing around inside a “price box” of say $35 and $40, then he knew if it broke to $40.50, it was time to buy.
Likewise, if the stock retreated back into the box, it hit his stop loss orders. He wanted to make sure the uptrend was confirmed with higher prices.
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受保護腳本
此腳本以閉源形式發佈。 不過,您可以自由且不受任何限制地使用它 — 在此處了解更多資訊。
免責聲明
這些資訊和出版物並不意味著也不構成TradingView提供或認可的金融、投資、交易或其他類型的意見或建議。請在使用條款閱讀更多資訊。