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Viewing “Large Lot” Traders with the FPBSOne of the powerful and popular techniques to using MarketDelta’s unique indicators is to compare the overall activity in the market to just the large lot traders. In this way, you can follow how the “big money” differs in its behavior from everyone else combined. We’ve received a number of requests lately on how to setup a chart to show this information, specifically with regards to the Footprint Bar Statistics indicator, or FPBS. Before I begin, here is another useful article from last year on how to use the Volume Breakdown indicator to visualize this information also. Click here for the article. The FPBS indicator analyzes each bar on a chart and reports any of many different desired fields of statistics on this bar, such as the total volume, the total delta, the volume just for the buy side or the sell side, and many other popular pieces of information. To learn more about this indicator, click here. Unlike the Volume Breakdown indicator, which has its own setting to filter volume, the FPBS filters volume only if the charted instrument, such as the ES (E-mini futures contract), is filtering volume. Thus, if you want two instances of the FPBS on your chart — one for the total volume, and another for just the large lot traders — you must have two instruments on the chart, even if both instruments are the same symbol. But one of these instruments will be filtered, while the other is not. Follow these steps to make this happen:
Note: There is also a “Style” option for invisible, but that is not what you want for these purposes. Use the settings above, but before you press “OK” to exist this window:
This will show both elements, which should have the same ticker symbol, but one will show the volume filter. You can close this box, as we do not need to again enter the setup for any of these settings.
After you choose the fields for the FPBS indicator, choose the first instrument, and press Add, then choose the second instrument and press Add+Close (if you just press “Add” the second time, instead of “Add+Close,” just close the window after adding the second instance of the indicator). The finished result will show the two different FPBS, with one showing the filtered volume. They appear on the chart in the order they were added. You can then resize the many different panes on your chart by right-clicking the chart and choosing the automatic Size option: As the French say, “Et Voilà!” : Nice Little Trick for your VB IndicatorIf you use the Volume Breakdown indicator, like so many people do, here is a nice little trick worth knowing. Typically the volume breakdown is just meant to show some sort of graph, but many times it is valuable to actually see the values associated within a delta histogram. Well now you can. Follow these steps: Your chart should look something like the bottom of the screenshot below. Ultimately you could add other statistics as well. Have fun! Navigating Market ProfilesMarket Profile charts are a specific chart type within MarketDelta. They provide the ability to display price activity in a novel way, with an emphasis on price distribution rather than time. For an introduction to Market Profile, click here. Saving Screen SpaceNot everyone has the luxury of multiple large computer monitors. And those who do will wish to get the most out of their screen space. When displaying Market Profile charts, it is often necessary to scroll through previous profiles to find where price found “value” and created a distribution, and to compare the current price distribution to prior distributions. But as you can see above, a single day’s profile can take up a lot of room onscreen. Here, we fit only 2 full days of activity, and part of a third. Here are some tips to get the most out of your screen’s real estate, if you wish to view as many profiles on the screen at the same time, without losing information, Consider overlapping the volume profiles with the TPO profiles. Double click the Profile chart to get the chart settings, and then configure the following option: After making this change, your profile will resemble: As you can see, you immediately start to see additional profiles on the screen. Even in this small picture, we’ve added about 30% more price distributions in the same screen space. View Letters as Blocks While some traders place an emphasis on the actual letter names that appear in the Profile brackets, others are content to just see the overall price distribution as a whole. Or it is sufficient for some to simply view the differing bracket colors. In these examples, the Letter Color is set to “Market Day” which provides a unique color for each segment of the day: morning, late morning, lunch, early afternoon, later afternoon and close. If you are content not to see the actual letters, this setting can really open up some screen space, making it easy to view many profiles on one screen: The result look like: We are now viewing twice as many Profiles in the same screen space as the original setting. This makes it easy to see how the market changed value perceptions over time, without excessive scrolling. Finally, hit the “Tab” key on your computer keyboard to turn off the Info Bar along the left edge of your chart to get even more room onscreen. (And this “Tab” again to turn it back on.) You can also show the price scale on only one side of the chart rather than both sides, by visiting these same chart preferences. Combining DistributionsA market may “bracket,” or “rotate,” for many days at a time before it breaks out to a new bracket in search of new value. For this reason, it is often necessary to “merge” multiple Market Profiles into one “composite” profile to make it easy to identify these distributions. Consider the following market activity that takes place over several days: The first three days had POCs at nearly the same price, with overlapping Profiles and nearly centered value areas across the same distribution. On the fourth day, price broke out above this distribution and started rotating. The following day continued this rotation around the same area (though slightly higher). One could interpret these five days as occurring across only two main distributions. To create the two composite profiles, you need to merge the first three days, then split the fourth day and merge its two pieces with the profiles to the left and right of that day. This is very easy to do. First, right-click on the first profile and choose the following option: Once you are done, you can do the same again, so the third day also becomes a part of that composite profile. Then you will see the following, at which point you are ready to split the fourth day into two profiles by right-clicking on the fourth bracket of that profile, and using the same menu: After you split, you see this: Finally, you can merge the two profiles on the right together, and also merge the left profile with the first part of the split. Ultimately, you end up with the two distributions: ShortcutsYou may find that you are quickly moving through a new Market Profile chart and create splits and merges frequently along the way. The right-click menu options may take up more time than you’d prefer when making many composites quickly. Consider these shortcuts: Merge with Control + Click Hold down the Control button when you click on a profile, and it merges automatically to the profile on its right. Split with Control + Shift + Click Hold down both the Control and Shift buttons when clicking on a bracket to split a profile at that bracket. Expand a Profile with Shift + Click To toggle between a Profile distribution graphic and a conventional 30-minute bar chart display (also called “splitting”), just hold Shift and click on the Profile. This can make it easier to identify the exact bracket where you wish to split the Profile into a new Profile. Zoom with Shift + Scroll Wheel Hold down the Shift button while you use the mouse’s scroll wheel to zoom in and out on a chart. This is another way to convert Profile letters to blocks, if you scroll out far enough. Processing Speed You will notice that you can split and merge Profiles much more quickly if you are working with minute data rather than Tick data. Consider downloading 30-minute bars if you want to more quickly navigate the Profile chart when splitting and merging. Save Money on Data CostsThis article is long overdue. Many of you might already be taking advantage of exchange fee waiver programs or free real time data depending upon which data vendor you are using to power MarketDelta. Regardless, below is a list of each data vendor we currently support and the steps necessary to either apply for the exchange fee waiver or receive free realtime data. In order to take advantage of the free real time, you must take action by following the steps below or contact your broker or data vendor. For a complete list of all the data sources we currently support see this link. OVERVIEW
BROKERAGE FEEDS
1) Contact your broker at Infinity and express interest in using IQFeed for your real time and historical data through MarketDelta. They can sign off on the exchange fee waiver program through IQFeed. 2) Just use the Infinity AT platform and MarketDelta can connect and receive the realtime data from it.
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