What time frames are used for swing trading?
Swing traders often identify the main trend on a daily chart or a 4-hour chart. They then use the hourly chart to identify the entry. Based on this, they determine the level to set stop loss and take profit.
An example of time frames using swing trading is shown in the following chart.
DAX index on the daily time frame
Here we have a daily chart on the DAX index where we establish the overall context and trend. At point A, the support level was broken, which became the new resistance, as the break was followed by a sharp move down. This indicated a downward trend. In swing trading, it is then necessary to wait for the price to return to the resistance level in the case of a downtrend (in the case of an uptrend, it is then necessary to wait for a return to the support level) and then fine-tune the entry here on the hourly chart.
Debugging short entry on DAX index on H1 chart
At point B, there was a return to the established resistance. The price tested it and broke slightly upwards. This indicates that liquidity has been taken out above this level, which was confirmed by the price going back below this resistance. At this point, the trader would have more confidence that the price could continue to fall and could have entered the trade short, i.e. speculating on the decline.
With a stop loss above the nearest high and a take profit to the nearest support (which occurred at point 1), the trade would generate a profit of 2R (where R is the unit of risk taken). If R were 1% of the account balance, then the profit would be 2% of the account deposit. This trade would last for 6 business days.