It’s all in a day’s work

I want to share a few observations on trading activity during the trading day. I will focus on the S&P 500 futures here, but may extend this (if there’s interest) to look at a few currencies and maybe other commodities. The same general, broad concepts will apply to all markets: bursts of activity around the open and close, and relatively inactive midday. Let’s dig a little deeper.

Measuring trend strength

Any measurement we apply to the market is at least a little bit arbitrary. This is one of the major problems of any kind of analysis: the market generates a flow of transactional data and quotes, and we have to filter and narrow down what we choose to look at. Any indicator or other measurement is another structure we impose on the data, so I prefer to do as little as possible. Simpler is often better.

A very simple measure of trend strength comes from a look at price bars. If the close is near the high (and the range of the bar is large), we can be reasonably sure that the market trended during that period. No, it’s not quite that simple because we will often be misled, but “reading inside the bars” is a useful skill to develop. In general, bars like this probably show good trends:

Bars which probably show a strong trend
Bars which probably show a strong trend

Bars like this probably show a weaker trend or a trading range:

Weak trend bars
Weak trend bars

We can create a simple measure, the Close as Percent of Range (C%R) which is the close as a percentage of the bar’s range: a bar closing in the middle would be 50%, while a bar closing on the high would be 100%. Yes, we are measuring one arbitrary point in time (the bar’s close), and I’m not a fan of intraday systems that focus on the bars’ closes, but this is a measure that probably averages out over time. We don’t want the downtrends (0% = strong downtrend = closed on the low) to cancel out the uptrends, so if we just “flip” everything under 50% (i.e., 25% becomes 75%), we can average by time of day and get a trend strength measure.

Trend strength by time of day

The S&P futures follow a pretty predictable pattern: they trend to trend well in the first hour and a half, trend less well into the ~14:00 time area, and then trend even more strongly into the close. This has clear implications for how you manage trades and what you, as an intraday trader, do: be aggressive with trend trades in the morning and afternoon, don’t chop up money (most days) on trend trades mid-day, and do not fade a strong afternoon trend. A look at the data confirms these tendencies. (These charts are time stamped at the end of the period, so 10:00 is the half hour period from 9:30 – 10:00.)

trend strength time of day

Trading activity by time of day

It’s probably not surprising to see trading activity and volume follow the same intraday “smile”. (Note that this measure is tick volume, not contract volume.) The same concept applies: active morning and afternoon, relatively dead intraday.

tick vol

Conclusions

If you’re an active trader, there are few surprises here. You knew all of this, at least intuitively, but maybe there are some refinements. You knew the morning and afternoon were the best trends, but did you know that the afternoon trends, on average, were that much stronger? Can you think about ways and filters we might use to find even better opportunities? Anyone can do this work, and it’s important to update it periodically because the market does shift in some subtle ways. If your trading hits a rough spot, is it you or has something changed in the market? Comparing market stats like this in recent times to longer history can be a first step in answering that question.

For all traders, it is important to understand how the trading day unfolds and to think about how this affects your trading–what you do, and, even more critically, what you will not do. Timing, as they say, is everything.

AdamHGrimes

Adam Grimes has over two decades of experience in the industry as a trader, analyst and system developer. The author of a best-selling trading book, he has traded for his own account, for a top prop firm, and spent several years at the New York Mercantile Exchange. He focuses on the intersection of quantitative analysis and discretionary trading, and has a talent for teaching and helping traders find their own way in the market.

This Post Has One Comment

  1. George Selinsky

    Thanks again Adam for your excellent day trading materials. Possible other instruments to look into are the oil futures market (CL in particular is probably the second most popular market for intraday traders these days after stock indeces) and perhaps you can tackle the EUR/USD which is the most popular (and usually the only reasonable) day trading instrument in FX. That has some issues with openings and closings, especially when there’s a difference in time zones. One other point, a fellow colleague and I were having a debate if some futures markets like energies and metals ‘slow down’ a bit before the open of US stocks (sort of like they do before a news report). My argument is that the US stock market is such a major global macroeconomic indicator that it would make sense traders of instruments heavily influenced by macroeconomic conditions (oil for example) would be interested in seeing how the market opens to get some cues. I’m just a bit unsure of how to test the idea.

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