5 Minute Charts Explanation and Guide + Three Free Setups
5 Minute Charts Explanation and Guide + Three Free Setups
5 Minute Charts Explanation and Guide + Three Free Setups
Select 5 Minutes
The close on 5-minute charts gives insight into the immediate
market direction of the trend for a stock. When a stock
closes at the low or high of the 5-minute bar, there is often
a short-term breather where the stock will go in the opposite
direction.
The psychology behind this is that the stock has been pushed
to an extreme as other active traders chase the price
trend. This breather can mark a major reversal, but in the
majority of cases, it creates the environment for a counter
move.
How Do You Trade 5 Minute Charts?
Bar any exhaustive scientific studies, we would dare to say
the 5-minute chart is one of the most popular time frames for
day traders.
It’s that fine line where most traders feel comfortable within
this time unit of measure. It also quietens the noise of 1 and
2 minute charts.
Now, let’s dive into a few strategies you can use with this
time frame.
In the morning, stocks will trend hard for the first 20-30
minutes into the 10 am reversal time zone. Day traders that
are looking to go opposite to the trend can wait for a close
at the high or low of the 5-minute bar to go opposite to the
morning move.
The smart money will grab the breakout and ride the market for
quick profits. However, new traders will either hold on too
long or jump on the bandwagon too late, perhaps on a breakout
that fails like this OCUP example below:
Bearish Engulfing Morning Reversal
The 5-minute chart time frame is often too large to capture
the volatility of the move heading into the 10 am reversal.
This can be a blessing or a curse depending on how you like to
trade.
Morning Reversal
This is the 5-minute morning reversal you are going to see
most often. There is a slight pop in the morning and then
after a move higher, a sharp reaction lower.
As you can see from the spinning top at the 6th 5 minute bar
of the day, we have supply entering the market. We then get a
breakout from that level that fails — a great opportunity to
get short.
Trading Breakouts
In addition to pullback trades, breakout trades are also a big
part of active trading. For these setups, you want to find
stocks that are up considerably in the pre-market or with
volume right off the open.
If you are open to more risk and would like to reap more
rewards, then you will want to set your eyes on low float
stocks.
You might also find a solid breakout strategy using our small
account building setup.
Next, you want a stock with volume that can push the price
[3]
higher .
After a while, certain patterns will emerge that you can use
to improve the accuracy of the trades you place.
Entering a Trade
Trade entry signals are generated when the stochastic
oscillator and relative strength index provide confirming
signals.
Trade Exit
You should exit the trade once the price closes beyond the
TEMA in the opposite direction of the primary trend.
There are many cases when candles move partially beyond the
TEMA line. We disregard such exit points and we exit the
market when the price fully breaks the TEMA. Have a look at
the example below:
Our second trade comes when the RSI enters the oversold area
just for a moment. This long signal is confirmed by the
stochastic, so we go long. The bullish move that ensued is
minor, but still in our favor!
Strategy Results
3 Positions
2 long
1 short
Time in the market: 3 hours and 10 minutes
Total profit: $0.98 (98 cents) per share
The reason for this is that the MACD does a pretty good job of
this itself. We will simply exit the market whenever the MACD
has a crossover in the opposite direction!
Notice that when using the MACD for exit points, you stay in
the market for a longer period of time.
With the exit of the previous position came the entry point
for the next trade. This is so because the MFI was already
down when the MACD exit crossover appeared. Thus, we go long
and we enter the best trade of the four! We hold McDonald’s
for 27 periods before the MACD gives us a bearish crossover.
This long position generated a profit of $0.88 (88 cents) per
share. Well, that my friend is a good trade!
Strategy Results
4 Positions
2 long
2 short
Time in the market: 11 hours and 20 minutes
Total profit: $2.58 per share
Four periods later, the Klinger and the RVA give us bearish
signals at once and we go short. We get a slight bearish move
of four periods before a candle closes below the LSMA. We
generate $0.12 (12 cents) per share more.
With the next candle, we get bearish signals from the RVA and
the Klinger and we go short with the closing of the previous
long position. We get out of this trade after 5 periods when a
bigger bullish candle closes above the LSMA. This trade
generated a profit of only $0.03 (3 cents) per share.
Strategy Results
4 Positions
2 long
2 short
Time in the market: 2 hours and 10 minutes
Total profit: $0.62 (62 cents) per share
In the other two strategies, the number of trades per day will
be significantly more. As you see with MACD + MFI, we traded 4
positions for 11 hours, while with Klinger, RVI, and LSMA, we
traded 4 positions for only 2 hours.
Yet, some of you will like fast-paced trading and will like to
exit the market more frequently. Just remember in trading,
more effort does not equal more money.
So, when you are setting up your trading desk, have multiple
charts up of the same stock. Below is a screenshot from
Tradingsim of an example of how you need to view stocks on
multiple time frames.
Lastly, the daily chart shows that after a nice run-up, VLDN
was starting to stabilize after a retracement of the rally.
Summary
Even if you are not trading 5-minute charts, it is essential
that you keep an eye on them. The majority of day traders are
using 5-minute charts to make their trading decisions.
Therefore, these traders tend to control the action.
Also, the morning is where all the action takes place in the
market. If you are going to trade during this time of day,
remember the two most common setups – pull back and the
breakout.
External References
1. Holidays and Trading Volumes. New York Stock Exchange
2. Lee, Justina and Peterseil, Yakob. (2019).Wall Street
Fights Stock Machines With Trend-Chasing on Steroids.
Bloomberg.com
3. Sincere, Michael. (2011). ‘Start Day Trading Now: A
Quick and Easy Introduction to Making Money While
Managing Your Risk‘. Simon & Schuster. p. 41
4. Stokes CMT, Martha. (2015). ‘How To Use Stochastic
Ideally‘. Seeking Alpha.com