Archive for the 'TFlow' Category

July 2007 Automated Trader Magazine

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

I wrote an article showing how elements of TFlow can now be the basis of a trading system. That is, instead of using a “last price” based oscillator, you can use an oscillator that employs the information available from TFlow, which are trades at the bid price versus trades at the ask price. The market […]

Quantity Triggered Stops (QTS) in 7.5

Friday, July 6th, 2007

Another feature in 7.5 is Quantity Triggered Stops (QTS). When you use the QTS order you set a threshold for what the bid or ask size in the exchange order book has to drop below before your stop is sent in. This means that if you have a stop resting below the market, and the […]

More About the CQG Order Ticker in CQG 7.5

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Traders using a depth-of-market view in their DOMTrader or Order Ticket can see the activities of other traders at the inside market and around the inside market on the DOM Ladder. However, the numerical display and the speed with which traders are adding, canceling, and modifying orders in the exchanges order book makes interpreting the […]

Smoothed TFlow Aggregation

Monday, June 18th, 2007

CQG 7.5 is providing traders with analytics built on the market transparency available from the exchanges electronic order book. TFlow was CQG’s start, and Order Ticker, Pre-Trade Analytics, and other features have been added to 7.5 to provide traders ways to use the market information now available.

One challenge active markets are producing a great deal […]

Using Price Alerts for Automated Trading in CQG 7.4

Wednesday, May 30th, 2007

In a previous posting, Automated Trading Using CQG 7.4 (Trend Line Cross), I explained CQG’s Alert functionality for tracking when the price action crosses a trendline. Discussed were steps on its use for triggering notification and sending orders to the exchange when a trend line was crossed. Here, we will look at the basic Price […]

Tracking Traded Volume in Price Bars

Friday, May 25th, 2007

Back in March, I posted an article detailing the tracking of the traded volume at the bid price versus the ask price on price bars. Yesterday’s release of the New Home Sales created some more examples of the usefulness of tracking the traded volume at the bid and ask price for price bars.

To start, I […]

The DOMTracker Oscillator Study

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

The previous post introduced the DOMTracker, which is part of the Pre-Trade Analytics group included in 7.5. This post details another study called DOMTracker Oscillator. This study is the difference between ask volume line (red) and the bid volume line (green) from the DOMTracker Study.

To review, the bid volume line (green) of the DOMTracker study […]

CQG’s Pre-Trade Analytics

Monday, May 21st, 2007

CQG’s upcoming release of 7.5 has a number of interesting features built upon the market transparency available from the exchange’s order book for electronically traded products. This collection of studies is dubbed Pre-Trade Analytics. The first study detailed here is called the DOMTracker. The study is only applicable to TFlow charts.

DOMTracker, as the name implies, […]

CQG 7.4 Portfolio Market Scans

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

Active traders are always looking for situations to exploit in different markets. Any particular situation can be converted to one or a set of conditions. To aid traders looking at different markets for particular situations, CQG’s Market Scan can define a set of conditions, search a portfolio of instruments for those meeting the conditions, and […]

CQG Charting Features

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

CQG offers 15 different charting styles. The list includes: Bar, Candlestick, Constant Volume Bar, Equalize Sessions, Fill Gap, Line, Market Profile, No gap, Percent bar, Point-&-figure, Spread bar, Tick, TickChartSmoothing, TFlow™ , Yield bar

The choices provide traders the visual format that fits their trading style. Special charting styles include Constant Volume bars, where the bars […]

Thom Hartle’s View of Trading and the Financial Markets