1 The Edge — why it works
The open concentrates the day's urgency
The first 15–30 minutes of the session carry the heaviest, most urgent order flow of the day, as overnight news, gaps, and pent-up demand all hit at once.
When that flow is decisively one-sided, price drives in a single direction with little overlap between bars — a sign that one side is paying up to get filled. That imbalance tends to persist long enough to trade, because large participants cannot complete their orders in a single print. The Opening Drive is simply a way to join confirmed urgency rather than guess at it.
2 Where it works — and doesn't
Urgency, not chop
Works best when…
- A clear pre-market catalyst (earnings, news, guidance).
- The first bars trend one way with full bodies and little overlap.
- Volume is surging versus a normal open.
- The broad market is moving the same direction.
Fails / avoid when…
- A two-sided, choppy, overlapping open — no drive exists.
- No catalyst and only average volume.
- The drive fights a strong opposing market.
- Thin, illiquid names where a single order distorts price.
3 Setup checklist
All true before you act
- ✓A catalyst. A real reason for urgency — news, a gap, a guidance change.
- ✓One-sided early bars. The first 1–5 minute candles trend together with body, not wicks.
- ✓Holding the extreme. Price stays above (or below) the opening-range edge, not slipping back in.
- ✓Expanding volume. Clearly heavier participation than a typical open.
- ✓Market alignment. The index and sector lean the same way as the drive.
4 The process
From signal to managed trade
Entry
Enter on the break and hold of the opening range (the high/low of the first 1–5 minutes) in the drive's direction.
Stop (1R)
Just back inside the opening range — if price re-enters the range, the drive has failed. Entry − that level = 1R.
Position size
Risk a small fixed % of the account; shares = risk ÷ 1R. Intraday leverage tempts oversizing — don't.
Exit & management
Trail under higher lows (or above lower highs), and scale out into +2R/+3R. Many drives fade by late morning, so don't overstay.
5 Worked example (illustrative)
One trade, start to finish, in R
| Account / risk per trade | $25,000 · 1% = $250 |
| Entry (break of opening-range high) | $101.20 |
| Stop (inside the range) — 1R | $99.50 · 1R = $1.70/share |
| Position size = $250 ÷ $1.70 | ≈ 147 shares |
| Drive runs to +3R | $106.30 |
| If it works: +3R | + $750 (≈ +3.0%) |
| If it fails: −1R | − $250 (≈ −1.0%) |
6 Honest expectancy
A few quality trades, not many
Opening drives are a small number of high-quality chances per week, not an all-day activity. The edge comes from only acting when urgency is obvious and skipping ambiguous opens.
Example: win 40% at +2.5R, lose 60% at −1R → (0.40 × 2.5) − (0.60 × 1) = +0.4R per trade. An expectation, never a guarantee.
7 Make it yours
Test before you trade
A no-risk validation routine
Use a replay tool to step through past opens. Mark the opening range, whether a one-sided drive formed, your entry on the break-and-hold, the inside-range stop, and how far it ran in R — before checking the rest of the day. Note how often choppy opens would have stopped you, and only keep the clean-drive subset.
8 Common mistakes
How traders blow this up
- Trading a chop as a drive. If bars overlap and wick, there is no drive — stand aside.
- No stop inside the range. Without it, a failed drive becomes an open-ended loss.
- Chasing extension. Entering far from the range gives a huge stop and poor reward/risk.
- Oversizing on leverage. Intraday buying power tempts 5% risk — the streak math is brutal.
- Overstaying. Drives often fade by late morning; trail and bank, don't dream.