When the ES has low volatility, traders have a few options:
1. Trade around news events, crossing fingers that price will move in one’s favor
2. Hope for a trend to occur. However, the time at which one may occur is an unknown.
3. Try to scalp whipsaws – again, a lot of finger crossing.
4. Do not trade at all – wait days, weeks or months before volatility picks up.
5. Use an advanced, algorithmic trading tool like the Atlas Line to call time and direction to enter (Short or Long)
Trading is a gamble regardless of a trader’s choice. Our preference is #5 – using the Atlas Line. Although the recent trading results published by Day Trade to Win indicate strong performance for the last three months of 2011, the trend also indicates that volatility determines profit potential irrespective of your trading technique. As seen in the video below, the trader simply increases the amount of contracts to make up for the lack of volatility.
Not every trader can afford to trade 17 contracts. However, starting with a small account and slowly building the account by using and becoming familiar with a reliable strategy is an option. That’s why the Atlas Line has our full recommendation.

Perhaps the biggest mistake a newbie trader can make is jumping into an live account with a broker before practicing. Trading platforms like NinjaTrader offer a way to simulate the live trading environment using actual live data (often through leading brokerages). This is as close to live trading one can come without subjecting real money to risk. For NinjaTrader, there are quite a few free live data feed options: the Zen-Fire data feed from Mirus, the Rithmic / Vision feed from Optimus Trading Group and the CQG feed from Global Futures, to name a few. Each feed is quite close when comparing speed and fills, although feed uptime and access costs can differ between brokerages. Many brokerages will pay for the feed, charging only the round-turn fee. Keep in mind that each data feed may have a different expiry period. Whatever feed you decide, consider testing multiple markets on consecutive days to see if there is any missing data, both real-time and historically.
Ever look at a chart to see if there’s any pattern in the candles, OHLCs, or boxes? Perhaps the best way to go about recognizing any such pattern is to look for support and resistance levels. These are areas in which price plateaus or ceases to fall through. Correlating these levels to a useable measurement such as price increments, trader psychology, news events is only half the challenge. The other half is ensuring these patterns occur frequently and profitably enough.