I've been swing trading equities for about a year with mixed results, and I'm trying to move beyond basic support and resistance lines to build a more systematic approach using technical analysis. I'm currently experimenting with combining moving average convergence divergence with relative strength index on daily charts, but I'm getting conflicting signals and often enter trades too late. For traders who rely heavily on technical analysis, what combination of indicators and timeframes have you found most reliable for identifying high-probability entry and exit points in trending markets? How do you effectively manage the noise on lower timeframes versus the lag on higher ones, and what resources or methodologies helped you learn to read price action and volume as a primary indicator rather than just relying on oscillators?
Nice setup—let's keep it practical. A two-timeframe approach helped me stop chasing entries: define the trend on the daily chart (price above 50 EMA and ideally above 200 EMA). Then look for entries on a shorter timeframe (4h or 1h) when price pulls back to the 21 EMA, with a bullish MACD cross and RSI holding above 40. Use a stop of 1.5x ATR(14) and aim for at least 2x reward-to-risk. Confirm breakout with rising volume before taking the trade.
Add a trend-strength filter and a volume check: require ADX > 25 to confirm a real trend, and require volume to be higher on breakout days (volume rising along with price). For exits, trail with a moving average-based stop or ATR, not just a fixed target. If price breaks the daily trend line or closes below the 50 EMA on the daily, tighten stops.
Noise reduction options: try Heikin-Ashi charts or Renko bars for a smoother picture; this helps you avoid micro-whipsaws on the intraday. Pair with VWAP for intraday bias and on-balance volume (OBV) for flow; if OBV is sloping up with price, you're likely in the right direction.
Learning resources: look at a blend—John Murphy's Technical Analysis, Al Brooks' Price Action books, Rayner Teo's YouTube videos, and backtesting with TradingView or QuantConnect. Start with backtesting a few setups across a few months to see how they perform in your markets. Keep a trade journal.
Practical steps to avoid late entries: set alerts on the 4h chart for pullback completion; use a 'confirmation checklist' (trend above long-term MA, MACD bullish, RSI above 40, volume up). This reduces emotional trades. Also practice with a paper-trading plan first.
As a quick check-in: what instruments are you trading and your typical timeframe? Are you aiming at swing trades on daily charts or intraday? If you share, I can tailor a simple 2-week testing plan with concrete entries and risk management.