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3 {{box cssClass="box floatinginfobox" title="**Quick Links**"}}
4 {{toc start="1" depth="2" numbered="false"/}}
5 {{/box}}
6
7 = Month 1 =
8
9 == {{id name="01"/}}01 - Elements Of A Trade Setup ==
10
11 ##00:35 -## Introduction to this month’s teaching tutorial.
12
13 ##02:25 -## The four criteria for defining elements to a trade setup:.
14
15 ##04:02 -## Looking at the marketplace with an expectation of what the markets are providing you.
16
17 ##05:47 -## How the market is programmed by human beings.
18
19 ##07:36 -## When the market is in a holding pattern -.
20
21 ##09:37 -## What is the importance of knowing expansion?
22
23 ##11:23 -## How to find consolidation in the market.
24
25 ##12:50 -## What is the retracement?
26
27 ##14:12 -## Liquidity gaps and liquidity voids.
28
29 ##15:40 -## The importance of price reversals and consolidation.
30
31 == {{id name="02"/}}02 - How Market Makers Condition The Market ==
32
33 ##00:22 -## We are collectively part of this larger hole of uninformed money.
34
35 ##02:41 -## When you’re looking to follow momentum, just follow one.
36
37 ##03:49 -## The illusion that traders are the driving force in the markets.
38
39 ##06:07 -## What’s going on in price is not for your well-being, it is for the banks’.
40
41 ##08:39 -## When we come into the marketplace, we don’t understand this. We think that we are the market. We push price up and down
42
43 ##12:27 -## How can we use these ideas and make them apply to price?
44
45 ##13:48 -## What is a daily range reversal?
46
47 ##16:48 -## How the interbank price-delivery algorithm works.
48
49 ##19:28 -## When you understand the relationships, you’ll know exactly how I’m doing these things internally.
50
51 ##21:30 -## If you understand price delivery, then you will not learn it just by what I’ve just explained to you.
52
53 == {{id name="03"/}}03 - What To Focus On Right Now ==
54
55 ##00:36 -## Who is the victim in every crime? The uninformed money.
56
57 ##03:15 -## Why you need to get that out of your charts -.
58
59 ##05:00 -## The difference between a liquidity provider and a smart money perspective in the marketplace -.
60
61 ##07:12 -## Central banks are in control of price just like anything else.
62
63 ##09:00 -## What should you be focusing on as a new student?
64
65 ##13:33 -## What you need to do with your charts.
66
67 ##15:16 -## Looking for clean highs and clean lows in the charts.
68
69 ##17:10 -## How to use a daily chart to identify liquidity voids in currencies.
70
71 ##19:29 -## Why you want to keep this chart separate from all the other charts.
72
73 ##21:38 -## The importance of keeping logs -.
74
75 == {{id name="04"/}}04 - Equilibrium Vs. Discount ==
76
77 ##00:29 -## Introduction to this month’s episode.
78
79 ##03:43 -## What goes into buying a specific market?
80
81 ##08:23 -## What is an impulsive price swing?
82
83 ##13:38 -## What happens when the market rallies back up to its old high.
84
85 ##18:18 -## The best buys come at equilibrium or less.
86
87 ##20:32 -## Swing high vs. swing low -.
88
89 ##26:50 -## Optimized trade entry.
90
91 ##32:53 -## Swing high, lower high, and lower high.
92
93 ##37:49 -## How do you know if the markets are going to go higher or lower?
94
95 ##41:12 -## What is the difference between equilibrium and discount?
96
97 ##46:03 -## What happens if you go into an hourly chart and don’t manage your expectations.
98
99 ##51:18 -## Fibonacci is a turtle soup -.
100
101 == {{id name="05"/}}05 - Equilibrium Vs. Premium ==
102
103 ##00:28 -## Introduction to today’s episode.
104
105 ##01:33 -## The first thing we look for is an impulse price swing.
106
107 ##03:31 -## Selling at a premium level in this market.
108
109 ##05:47 -## What is an optimal trade entry in this market?
110
111 ##08:27 -## Selling at a premium vs. a premium market.
112
113 ##10:38 -## Where do you take your profits at?
114
115 ##13:09 -## Selling a turtle soup inside a premium bay.
116
117 ##15:00 -## Take profits on a swing low.
118
119 ##16:37 -## Selling at premium prices -.
120
121 ##17:56 -## How to trade with a daily bias.
122
123 == {{id name="06"/}}06 - Fair Valuation ==
124
125 ##00:39 -## What is fair valuation? -.
126
127 ##03:06 -## What is a liquidity void?
128
129 ##05:52 -## Establishing fair value.
130
131 ##08:38 -## What led to this bullish move and an Australian dollar this week?
132
133 ##14:11 -## What is the fair value for the market makers?
134
135 ##16:38 -## Why do market makers still look for higher prices?
136
137 ##18:45 -## The strongest move out of that consolidation on a hard-timeframe chart.
138
139 ##24:05 -## Looking at the total range in terms of valuation.
140
141 ##25:56 -## The three reference points for price action -.
142
143 ##28:11 -## When markets are in consolidation, you will be able to forecast the next movement out of the consolidation.
144
145 == {{id name="07"/}}07 - Liquidity Runs ==
146
147 ##00:29 -## What is liquidity? -.
148
149 ##03:19 -## Understanding liquidity in the marketplace.
150
151 ##05:38 -## The market has a tendency to run out of old highs and old lows -.
152
153 ##08:23 -## High resistance liquidity runs on an old low are highly defended.
154
155 ##10:38 -## High resistance liquidity runs -.
156
157 ##12:22 -## What happens when the market breaks through low resistance.
158
159 ##14:28 -## What is a High Resistance liquidity run?
160
161 ##16:53 -## Examples of a high resistance liquidity run and a low resistance liquidityrun.
162
163 ##18:33 -## High resistance liquidity run -.
164
165 ##20:16 -## High resistance, low resistance liquidity run.
166
167 == {{id name="08"/}}08 - Impulse Price Swings & Market Protraction ==
168
169 ##00:36 -## Impulse Price Swings.
170
171 ##02:21 -## Market protraction is time sensitive.
172
173 ##03:55 -## What to look for in London.
174
175 ##06:55 -## When the market goes into a projectionairy state -.
176
177 ##08:08 -## Looking at the market in the context of what we have shared so far.
178
179 ##09:46 -## What is a market protraction phase?
180
181 = Month 2 =
182
183 == {{id name="09"/}}09 - Growing Small Accounts ==
184
185 ##00:23 -## Do not rush to make massive gains in pips or percent returns -.
186
187 ##02:21 -## It doesn’t matter how much you start with, you can start on a shoestring budget.
188
189 ##04:10 -## Respect the risk side of the trade setups more over the reward.
190
191 ##05:52 -## If you have very small risk, well defined trade setups, you’re never going to have a loser.
192
193 ##10:50 -## An example of trading with statistics behind it - 50% return in one month.
194
195 ##13:56 -## You have to respect this side of the market -.
196
197 ##15:39 -## The importance of trading in highly selective conditions -.
198
199 ##20:07 -## Where else would you expect the markets to be drawn to and why should the market react at these specific levels?
200
201 ##22:35 -## We have a 20 pip stop loss and a 1 and a half percent profit.
202
203 ##24:28 -## What happens if you do this every day?
204
205 == {{id name="10"/}}10 - Framing Low Risk Trade Setups ==
206
207 ##00:25 -## What makes a low-risk trade setup worth taking?
208
209 ##02:08 -## What can we do to lower the risk in a trade?
210
211 ##03:28 -## Daily bullish order block vs. hourly low.
212
213 ##04:50 -## What if you want to be buying lower and offer yourself less risk exposure?
214
215 ##06:24 -## Refining the entry from 7520.
216
217 ##08:07 -## Refining your risk/reward.
218
219 == {{id name="11"/}}11 - How Traders Make 10% Per Month ==
220
221 ##00:27 -## Using our case study on the Aussie Dollar as an example.
222
223 ##02:01 -## What if we were to look at the market like this.
224
225 ##03:36 -## Liquidity pools and liquidity levels.
226
227 ##06:01 -## When you look at the market framing it with a very low risk, low risk strategy, you can make handsome rewards.
228
229 ##08:10 -## Frame your trades on levels that should see institutional sponsorship -.
230
231 ##10:21 -## What happens if you only get half of the 100 pip range?
232
233 ##12:27 -## You have to pay yourself because you don’t know if your trades will pan out.
234
235 ##14:04 -## The second portion of the trade will always make more than the first.
236
237 ##15:42 -## If you can’t do this ultra-short-term trade, you can still do trades like this.
238
239 == {{id name="12"/}}12 - No Fear Of Losing ==
240
241 ##00:33 -## What trading with fear of taking losses actually does to your trading.
242
243 ##01:59 -## Defining trade setups to frame five to one reward to risk.
244
245 ##03:55 -## How to frame good reward multiples and justify losing trades.
246
247 ##05:44 -## The average profit is $150 and the average loss is $50.
248
249 ##07:30 -## Reframing the sample set of trades.
250
251 ##09:34 -## The average loss and average profit would increase as the equity increases or drops, but for these examples we’re looking at the sample size data
252
253 ##11:28 -## Risk and Reward Ratio.
254
255 ##14:09 -## Think about this for a minute. You only have to be right half the time.
256
257 ##16:19 -## If you can do a multiple of 5-to-1, you can get 20% returns every month.
258
259 ##18:04 -## There is no fear that’s justified in taking losses.
260
261 == {{id name="13"/}}13 - How To Mitigate Losing Trades Effectively ==
262
263 ##00:23 -## Teaching #5: How to mitigate losing trades effectively.
264
265 ##01:44 -## What happens if you get stopped out.
266
267 ##03:54 -## Taking another stab at the market.
268
269 ##05:13 -## Using the bottom of the down candle as our stop loss.
270
271 ##07:56 -## Get back to even and then regroup.
272
273 ##09:42 -## Once it’s mitigated you’re going to lock that in.
274
275 ##11:29 -## When to lock in your stop loss and when to take it off the table.
276
277 ##13:13 -## Playing devil’s advocate -.
278
279 ##15:09 -## One trade doesn’t have to erase all of your losses -.
280
281 == {{id name="14"/}}14 - The Secrets To Selecting High Reward Setups ==
282
283 ##00:41 -## The secrets to high-reward trading setups.
284
285 ##02:33 -## Why do I focus on one currency pair over another? -.
286
287 ##08:15 -## If you don’t have these binary thought processes and where you’re specifically dealing with in terms of decision making you won’
288
289 ##13:51 -## The people that are struggling right now are the ones that are trying to be reactionary or impulsively thinking about what they want to do right now.
290
291 ##18:54 -## What are the components that make up the trade templates?
292
293 ##23:48 -## Are we in an inflationary, deflationary, or deflationary market?
294
295 ##28:49 -## Top down analysis, top down data, and market sentiment.
296
297 ##31:55 -## Intermediate perspective on the marketplace framing high reward trading scenarios.
298
299 ##36:48 -## How do you arrive at your intermediate vs. short term perspective?
300
301 ##42:21 -## The weekly range trader -.
302
303 ##46:11 -## What are you looking for in the FX market?
304
305 ##51:50 -## What is a High Reward Trading Scenario?
306
307 ##58:33 -## The importance of having a flowchart for every model.
308
309 == {{id name="15"/}}15 - Market Maker Trap False Flag ==
310
311 ##00:31 -## Introduction to the market maker trap of false flags.
312
313 ##01:37 -## What is a bull flag? -.
314
315 ##04:25 -## What is a Bear Flag or Bull Flag?
316
317 ##07:11 -## What does a bull flag look like in price action?
318
319 ##11:25 -## Daily chart of the market.
320
321 ##14:06 -## Looking at the gap between the opening of this candle and the close of this candles.
322
323 ##16:18 -## What is a bull flag?
324
325 ##20:49 -## How to identify a false bear flag.
326
327 ##22:56 -## Looking for an upside objective here -.
328
329 ##25:17 -## What is a bear flag? -.
330
331 == {{id name="16"/}}16 - Market Maker Trap False Breakouts ==
332
333 ##00:31 -## What is a false breakout above price consolidation?
334
335 ##02:47 -## What is a breakout trader or neophyte trader perspective?
336
337 ##04:38 -## When the market breaks below the consolidation, what types of orders rest above the highs by stops?
338
339 ##06:25 -## When smart money’s long, how do they exit their positions?
340
341 ##08:05 -## Is there any reason to suspect that price could go higher?
342
343 ##10:19 -## Buy stops are used to pair long exits.
344
345 ##12:21 -## Market makers are providing liquidity -.
346
347 ##14:36 -## The market seeks liquidity below the marketplace and once it absorbs it, it quickly runs the other direction. Why is that happening?
348
349 ##16:41 -## The first price swing from the first initial false breakout below the old lows.
350
351 ##18:39 -## How do you know if you’re in a bullish or bearish market profile?
352
353 = Month 3 =
354
355 == {{id name="17"/}}17 - Timeframe Selection & Defining Setups ==
356
357 ##00:37 -## Timeframe selection and setups for your model.
358
359 ##03:37 -## Daily chart vs. weekly chart.
360
361 ##10:06 -## The benefit of studying conceptually and modular things.
362
363 ##15:38 -## The importance of being a contrarian trader.
364
365 ##20:29 -## Monthly charts are the long-term price action reference.
366
367 ##24:55 -## There is a great deal of opportunities in the monthly chart -.
368
369 ##27:40 -## What happens if price breaks down below a bearish order block?
370
371 ##33:44 -## What type of trader would be there when price hits the 5080 level?
372
373 ##37:53 -## What is a bearish order block? How does it work?
374
375 ##43:09 -## If you're not a stop run setup trader, you can't see turtle soup if you don't have the ability to trust that.
376
377 == {{id name="18"/}}18 - Institutional Order Flow ==
378
379 ##00:25 -## Institutional order flow and what makes it easy to see.
380
381 ##02:27 -## Where is the maximum level of liquidity from here?
382
383 ##05:01 -## Looking at the middle of the candle.
384
385 ##07:15 -## Institutional order flow and bullishness.
386
387 ##11:43 -## How to internalize the market like this.
388
389 ##13:10 -## What is bearish order block?
390
391 ##15:45 -## Institutional order flow reaching for the stops.
392
393 ##19:55 -## How do we know it’s gonna be bearish?
394
395 ##22:48 -## The bullish order block is violated.
396
397 ##24:45 -## Institutional order flow is the seeking of large institutional liquidity.
398
399 == {{id name="19"/}}19 - Institutional Sponsorship ==
400
401 ##00:22 -## How to identify institutional sponsorship in long setups.
402
403 ##01:38 -## What are the criteria used for short setups?
404
405 ##07:11 -## What to look for when studying price action.
406
407 ##11:40 -## Identifying institutional sponsorship in price action.
408
409 ##16:05 -## How do we know if there is institutional sponsorship?
410
411 ##21:30 -## Market structure on a daily chart has now changed to bullishness -.
412
413 ##24:36 -## What is a bullish order block? What does it mean?
414
415 ##30:25 -## The four-hour candle chart.
416
417 ##35:19 -## Power 3 - Daily Open High Low and Close.
418
419 ##39:57 -## What is the order block that you use?
420
421 == {{id name="20"/}}20 - The Next Setup - Anticipatory Skill Development ==
422
423 ##00:31 -## The monthly chart is only going to move with a great deal of money behind it.
424
425 ##01:47 -## Every single candle on a monthly chart over the last three months.
426
427 ##02:57 -## Down candles as a bullish order block.
428
429 ##04:57 -## Daily chart of the ETF.
430
431 ##06:50 -## Looking at 132 as a downside objective -.
432
433 ##08:15 -## Find the most recent down candle, most recent up candle, and your range.
434
435 ##09:54 -## Daily, weekly and monthly charts -.
436
437 == {{id name="21"/}}21 - Institutional Market Structure ==
438
439 ##00:26 -## What is institutional market structure in forex?
440
441 ##02:43 -## When the dollar index makes a lower low, foreign currency pairs make a higher high.
442
443 ##05:14 -## Non symmetrical market conditions when the dollar index makes a lower low in the foreign currency.
444
445 ##07:25 -## What does a symmetrical market condition look like?
446
447 ##09:44 -## What is being accumulated in the market.
448
449 ##12:08 -## What type of stops reside above an old high? -.
450
451 ##13:49 -## Retail chases this run like this and false breakout, while smart money looks at failure swings and the lows.
452
453 ##15:23 -## How to use a toll chart as an overlay for the MMT4 platform.
454
455 ##17:52 -## Dollar index is making a higher high at the same as the dollar index is failing to make a lower low.
456
457 ##19:12 -## Identifying Institutional Market Structure.
458
459 == {{id name="22"/}}22 - Macro Economic To Micro Technical ==
460
461 ##00:28 -## The secrets to how I call markets.
462
463 ##01:47 -## When I look at the marketplace, I’m looking for an insight that would give me a three to six-month outlook on where currencies
464
465 ##04:03 -## The bond market will tell me what the markets are going to do.
466
467 ##06:16 -## When the bond market is creating a high at the same time that the dollar index is making a low.
468
469 ##08:28 -## Dollar/Bond Divergence:.
470
471 ##10:38 -## The 10 year note vs. 30 year bond charts.
472
473 ##12:45 -## What’s going to happen in currency markets in September.
474
475 ##15:23 -## The Dollar Index is like the pins in the lock.
476
477 ##17:26 -## Why the dollar is giving up the ghost.
478
479 == {{id name="23"/}}23 - Market Maker Trap Trendline Phantoms ==
480
481 ##00:33 -## Teaching #7: Diagonal Trendline Support and False Trend Lines.
482
483 ##02:06 -## There’s no basis for trendline theory.
484
485 ##03:54 -## The only thing that makes price move is the context.
486
487 ##05:45 -## How do market makers capitalize on the fallacy of trend lines?
488
489 ##07:29 -## In periods when prices are making higher lows and higher highs, the use of trendline support will be adopted by retail traders.
490
491 ##10:59 -## How many times will the market break through the trendline?
492
493 ##12:54 -## Example #1 - High vs. Low.
494
495 ##16:02 -## What’s going on in the market.
496
497 ##18:45 -## Is this a bearish trend line?
498
499 ##20:48 -## Buying or selling the false trendline.
500
501 == {{id name="24"/}}24 - Market Maker Trap Head Shoulders Pattern ==
502
503 ##00:32 -## Head and shoulders pattern -.
504
505 ##01:49 -## What is an inverted head and shoulders pattern?
506
507 ##03:39 -## Head and shoulders patterns and picking tops and bottoms -.
508
509 ##04:57 -## Head and Shoulders Pattern and Neckline.
510
511 ##07:41 -## Daily and hourly chart examples of this pattern.
512
513 ##09:15 -## Head and shoulders pattern for retail.
514
515 ##10:35 -## Institutional order flow and liquidity.
516
517 ##12:38 -## An inverted head-and-shoulder pattern and bullish order block.
518
519 ##14:56 -## Head and shoulders inverted and bullish.
520
521 = Month 4 =
522
523 == {{id name="25"/}}25 - Interest Rate Effects On Currency Trades ==
524
525 ##00:24 -## Introduction to the interest rate triads.
526
527 ##01:48 -## Looking at the price action of these three interest rates in relationship to one another will unlock a lot of the things that most of the time you eat
528
529 ##03:02 -## Looking at a base asset or benchmark in bullish and bearish conditions.
530
531 ##05:05 -## Some stocks are not making lower lows because they’re making higher lows.
532
533 ##06:40 -## How to view smart money in the interest rate market.
534
535 ##08:40 -## When there’s going to be a shift in the marketplace and if this occurs at a moment when you’re identifying a potential institutional
536
537 ##10:57 -## Looking at the 30 year treasury bond market.
538
539 ##13:18 -## You have to have a predetermined idea of what the market that you're about to trade should see in terms of bullishness or bearishness.
540
541 ##15:00 -## How do you validate what you’re about to trade?
542
543 ##16:44 -## How to use this information to build an action plan -.
544
545 == {{id name="26"/}}26 - Reinforcing Liquidity Concepts & Price Delivery ==
546
547 ##00:36 -## Introduction to today’s module.
548
549 ##03:33 -## What is the most logical area for the market to pull back down?
550
551 ##09:09 -## Daily and weekly charts of the yen.
552
553 ##13:54 -## How do you know when the market is going to reach for specific highs?
554
555 ##16:21 -## What’s going to run for the monthly fair value.
556
557 ##20:42 -## What are you looking for?
558
559 ##25:11 -## Down candles in the pair.
560
561 ##27:40 -## How to find bullish order block setups.
562
563 ##31:58 -## Looking at the monthly and weekly charts to find buy signals.
564
565 ##37:48 -## The importance of having a day-by-day, hourly, weekly, and monthly timeframe in your trading.
566
567 == {{id name="27"/}}27 - Orderblocks ==
568
569 ##00:35 -## Defining a bullish order block.
570
571 ##02:53 -## What are you waiting for?
572
573 ##08:16 -## What we’re looking for in the market.
574
575 ##09:52 -## What to look for in the midpoint of the down candle.
576
577 ##14:45 -## What is a bullish order block? How does it work?
578
579 ##16:56 -## What’s Above Equal High?
580
581 ##23:07 -## What are we waiting for to support the idea that large traders want to send price higher?
582
583 ##25:21 -## How to identify bullish order blocks in the market.
584
585 ##29:59 -## Another opportunity for a buyer -.
586
587 ##31:27 -## Refining these levels into daily and weekly levels.
588
589 == {{id name="28"/}}28 - Mitigation Blocks ==
590
591 ##00:27 -## What is a mitigation block theory?
592
593 ##02:09 -## How do you know if the market is ready to break down?
594
595 ##03:39 -## What is a mitigation block?
596
597 ##05:12 -## Three reference points that you need to be aware of during a market structure shift.
598
599 ##07:14 -## Where’s our focus right now?
600
601 ##09:22 -## The smart money understands these short term fluctuations and they can drive price on a short term basis higher or lower through manipulation.
602
603 ##11:04 -## What is a mitigation block? -.
604
605 ##13:34 -## What is a mitigation block?
606
607 == {{id name="29"/}}29 - ICT Breaker Block ==
608
609 ##00:20 -## How do you use this form of mitigation to highlight a trade setup?
610
611 ##01:50 -## What’s a bullish breaker?
612
613 ##03:14 -## Bearish and bullish breaker.
614
615 ##05:31 -## Telltale signs that you have a bullish breaker.
616
617 ##07:19 -## Real price action in real price action.
618
619 ##08:46 -## Why prices don’t like to do what they like.
620
621 == {{id name="30"/}}30 - ICT Rejection Block ==
622
623 ##00:33 -## What do you see in this chart at major highs and lows?
624
625 ##01:48 -## Major false breaks above an old high and old low.
626
627 ##03:16 -## Distribution and accumulation patterns at highs and lows -.
628
629 ##05:04 -## What is a bearish rejection block?
630
631 ##06:44 -## Is it showing underlying distribution or is it showing a failure?
632
633 ##08:23 -## What is a rejection block?
634
635 ##10:19 -## Selling on a stop-loss as an entry pattern.
636
637 ##12:05 -## What is a bullish rejection block?
638
639 ##14:16 -## Taking profits at the bottom of the swing low.
640
641 == {{id name="31"/}}31 - Reclaimed ICT Orderblock ==
642
643 ##00:33 -## What is Reclaimed Blocks Theory?
644
645 ##01:52 -## Market makers are going to be scaling in early.
646
647 ##03:37 -## What is a bullish order block?
648
649 ##05:22 -## What it looks like in price action.
650
651 ##06:55 -## Every up candle that sees a displacement or short-term decline confirms that there is hedging under way.
652
653 ##08:38 -## An example of a bearish order block.
654
655 ##10:28 -## We wait for the reclaimed mechanism that takes place where the market makers will use the same reference points.
656
657 == {{id name="32"/}}32 - ICT Propulsion Block ==
658
659 ##00:20 -## Propulsion blocks and precaution blocks.
660
661 ##02:12 -## Looking at the bullish/bearish candle in price action.
662
663 ##03:46 -## What is a propulsion candle?
664
665 ##05:26 -## An example of a bearish propulsion candle.
666
667 ##06:53 -## You have to see it break below this candles low, which it does here.
668
669 == {{id name="33"/}}33 - ICT Vacuum Block ==
670
671 ##00:35 -## Vacuum Block Theory.
672
673 ##02:06 -## When we see an exhaustion gap.
674
675 ##03:58 -## What is a vacuum block?
676
677 ##06:14 -## Visualizing the gap as a candle.
678
679 ##08:25 -## What would happen if the gap was time sensitive?
680
681 ##10:12 -## How to use the gap as a reference point.
682
683 ##12:19 -## A vacuum block is nothing more than a breakaway gap.
684
685 == {{id name="34"/}}34 - Liquidity Voids ==
686
687 ##00:40 -## The reinforcing of liquidity voids and when to anticipate ranges.
688
689 ##02:04 -## How long does it take for these voids to close in?
690
691 ##03:31 -## What is a liquidity void? -.
692
693 ##05:15 -## What’s going to be building up below these lows?
694
695 ##06:56 -## Price action has been a complete and uniform delivery of price action.
696
697 ##08:37 -## What was necessary for them to facilitate new longs?
698
699 ##10:40 -## What is a price gap? How can we use it?
700
701 ##12:40 -## What can we do with a common gap?
702
703 == {{id name="35"/}}35 - Liquidity Pools ==
704
705 ##00:39 -## When to anticipate rates, liquidity, and liquidity pools.
706
707 ##03:27 -## If the undertones of the market suggest the dollar is bearish, we want to sell above old highs.
708
709 ##05:33 -## When the market trades below an old low, we view that as an opportunity to buy up the sell side liquidity.
710
711 ##07:29 -## When the market is predisposed to go higher, wait for the market to go lower.
712
713 ##09:56 -## What is the risk with this setup?
714
715 ##11:42 -## When do we anticipate these stop-loss raids?
716
717 ##13:31 -## Transposing the 15 minute timeframe to a daily timeframe.
718
719 ##15:34 -## A liquidity pool example on the Dollar/CAD pair.
720
721 ##18:03 -## An example of a liquidity pool reaction in the dollar index.
722
723 ##20:04 -## Another run on liquidity pool.
724
725 == {{id name="36"/}}36 - ICT Fair Value Gaps FVG ==
726
727 ##00:26 -## What is a fair value gap? -.
728
729 ##01:52 -## Looking at the fair value gap.
730
731 ##04:21 -## What’s the fair value gap?
732
733 ##06:35 -## The turtle soup or false break below an old low is a possibility.
734
735 ##08:36 -## Understanding the overlap of liquidity voids and fair value gaps -.
736
737 ##09:55 -## What it looks like when we have a run above an old high and a liquidity void.
738
739 ##12:07 -## What’s the difference between a high and low candle?
740
741 ##14:17 -## Buyside liquidity from the opening to the high.
742
743 ##16:00 -## Delivering a full block of efficient trading.
744
745 == {{id name="37"/}}37 - Divergence Phantoms ==
746
747 ##00:33 -## Introduction to Momentum Dissonance Phantoms.
748
749 ##02:16 -## Types of divergence in trend trading.
750
751 ##04:06 -## How do you know if the market is bullish or bearish?
752
753 ##05:35 -## An example of a bearish divergence.
754
755 ##07:48 -## Hidden divergence or trend following divergence -.
756
757 ##09:32 -## How market makers manipulate price.
758
759 ##10:59 -## Retail traders are looking for bottoms -.
760
761 ##13:11 -## If we see a bullish order block, then we can expect price to snap back higher.
762
763 ##15:05 -## What’s going on with the stochastic?
764
765 ##17:47 -## Divergence phantoms -.
766
767 == {{id name="38"/}}38 - Double Bottom Double Top ==
768
769 ##00:31 -## Teaching #8 of 8: Measurements and clean highs and lows.
770
771 ##01:42 -## When I was going through my coming up as a trader, I took a lot of the things I learned from institutional trading and retail trading and blended
772
773 ##03:09 -## What we have delineated on the chart.
774
775 ##04:37 -## Short and put a protective buy stop.
776
777 ##06:35 -## What would you be reaching for?
778
779 ##08:28 -## How much beyond the double top does the algorithm expect?
780
781 ##10:19 -## The algorithm is going to know those reference points.
782
783 ##11:53 -## Why you get these spike reversals on both sides of the marketplace and why you get the reactions.
784
785 = Month 5 =
786
787 == {{id name="39"/}}39 - Quarterly Shifts & IPDA Data Ranges ==
788
789 ##00:21 -## If the markets were completely random, how could anyone have an edge?
790
791 ##03:49 -## What is a price engine algorithm and how does it work?
792
793 ##08:25 -## How to use the data to predict the outcome of smart money accumulation for buy programs.
794
795 ##15:16 -## What if the Dollar Index breaks out of its previous low?
796
797 ##21:06 -## What is a quarterly shift? -.
798
799 ##26:44 -## What’s more significant? The intermediate term price low or the intermediate term high that formed?
800
801 ##32:49 -## What does the cast forward look like?
802
803 ##37:51 -## Daily and long-term setups -.
804
805 ##43:03 -## The Euro Dollar Index:.
806
807 ##47:00 -## The relationship of how the dollar makes lower lows and higher highs.
808
809 == {{id name="40"/}}40 - Open Float ==
810
811 ##00:18 -## What is Open Float?
812
813 ##02:31 -## How often do you trade 12-month highs and lows?
814
815 ##04:30 -## Short-term volatility prognostication.
816
817 ##05:38 -## How do I know if the market is going to stop?
818
819 ##07:42 -## What is a break in market structure? How does it happen?
820
821 ##11:52 -## Short-term high and short-term low.
822
823 ##13:18 -## How do you know when the markets are going to reach for one side of the liquidity or the other?
824
825 ##15:52 -## What’s going on with the FX market?
826
827 ##17:58 -## Daily and weekly charts are a great way to look for directional bias.
828
829 ##19:47 -## Every rally has a failure to make new ground and can't make a higher high. When it does, it is punished immediately.
830
831 == {{id name="41"/}}41 - Using IPDA Data Ranges ==
832
833 ##00:06 -## Today’s Topic: Australian Dollar.
834
835 ##03:03 -## How long does it take for these things to come to fruition?
836
837 ##06:06 -## The Australian Dollar vs. the Australian Dollar futures contract.
838
839 ##13:11 -## What would cause the market to change direction?
840
841 ##17:12 -## Where is the fair value gap in the last 60 days? Where are the price gaps that have not been efficiently delivered?
842
843 ##21:56 -## How does the algorithm know where the fun stops are -.
844
845 ##25:06 -## How can a computer program know where everyone stops?
846
847 ##33:05 -## How to use the daily and weekly charts to predict the direction of the market.
848
849 ##36:45 -## Stochastic and oversold conditions.
850
851 ##42:08 -## Casting forward and looking back.
852
853 ##45:50 -## The Australian Dollar candlestick chart.
854
855 ##48:58 -## What is the most misunderstood data point in trading -.
856
857 ##54:21 -## Why is Open Interest Declining During Consolidation?
858
859 ##57:02 -## If the central bank is the storehouse for price -.
860
861 ##01:02:25 -## Why are they doing that? -.
862
863 ##01:05:25 -## What does this mean for forex trading?
864
865 ##01:11:06 -## The three-month four-month moves that take place every month are executable in a way where you can make a great deal of money.
866
867 ##01:14:13 -## Finding the next big move in the market -.
868
869 ##01:20:12 -## What is the process that sets up the trades on these timeframes?
870
871 ##01:22:17 -## Why you need to know why you’re doing this -.
872
873 ##01:25:40 -## You have to practice. If you only do the things I'm showing you, you’re cheating yourself of all kinds of learning opportunity.
874
875 ##01:32:46 -## Where are we at with respect to the lowest low in the last 60 days?
876
877 ##01:36:36 -## When they form liquidity will build above it or below it -.
878
879 ##01:44:01 -## If there is any month you’re going to have to come back to this mentorship, it’s this one.
880
881 ##01:46:42 -## Open interest is unique to a specific asset class -.
882
883 ##01:51:40 -## If you’re a market maker, you have to know certain things.
884
885 ##01:54:54 -## You don’t need an indicator to tell you if you’re overbought or oversold.
886
887 == {{id name="42"/}}42 - Defining Open Float Liquidity Pools ==
888
889 ##00:07 -## Defining Open Float Liquidity Pools.
890
891 ##01:59 -## Highs and lows over the last 60 days.
892
893 ##04:07 -## How to identify short-term and intermediate-term highs and lows.
894
895 ##08:28 -## Looking at every 20-day interval and looking back.
896
897 ##10:58 -## Daily Chart: Dollar/Cad pair.
898
899 ##14:42 -## Identifying the most obvious swing high and low in the market.
900
901 ##16:09 -## Institutional order flow is bearish.
902
903 ##17:27 -## What happens when the US dollar and the Canadian dollar are in an inverted relationship.
904
905 ##21:34 -## What happens if open interest declines while the market drops off precipitously?
906
907 ##23:19 -## Casting forward 60 days, casting forward 40 days, and casting forward 20 days.
908
909 == {{id name="43"/}}43 - Defining Institutional Swing Points ==
910
911 ##00:11 -## Defining Institutional Swing Points.
912
913 ##01:57 -## Characteristics of a short-term and long-term breaker.
914
915 ##06:03 -## Looking at intraday charts gives us a lot of examples of where these types of events take place.
916
917 ##08:15 -## How do you know if you’re going to see this pattern reversed if you sell above the previous high?
918
919 ##12:28 -## When you’re looking to be a buyer, you want to see our short term low form at or just above a key support level.
920
921 ##14:51 -## The problem you're going to encounter is because we're trading on a daily timeframe as position traders, we’re going to have to wait
922
923 ##19:31 -## What is a failure swing?
924
925 ##21:37 -## What happens if the market takes out this short term high?
926
927 ##25:56 -## Institutions are in the business of knocking the funds out when they're going to be correct.
928
929 ##29:03 -## The ideal trade entry pattern in the marketplace.
930
931 == {{id name="44"/}}44 - Using 10 Year Notes In HTF Analysis ==
932
933 ##00:11 -## Lesson 2: 10 Year Treasury Notes in Higher-Timeframe Analysis.
934
935 ##01:24 -## Where do you wound when charting the 10 year treasury prices or futures contract?
936
937 ##03:02 -## Seasonal tendency on the 10-year Treasury note.
938
939 ##04:11 -## If we see this occurring in the 10 year treasury, should we also be seeing this in the Dollar Index?
940
941 ##06:16 -## The 10 year treasury note and the US Dollar Index.
942
943 ##08:03 -## Dollar Index vs. 10 Year Treasury Notes.
944
945 ##10:10 -## What does a large consolidation mean for foreign currencies?
946
947 ##11:51 -## Looking at the March contract of the 10 year treasury notes.
948
949 ##13:48 -## What’s going to happen if the 10 year treasury notes and the dollar index are in a trend.
950
951 ##15:48 -## When are you looking for a trade that is going to be explosive?
952
953 == {{id name="45"/}}45 - Qualifying Trade Conditions With 10 Year Yields ==
954
955 ##00:12 -## How do you know when the seasonal tendency is most likely to occur?
956
957 ##02:08 -## Cracking correlation in the 10 year Treasury note against the dollar index.
958
959 ##04:12 -## Why the currency markets have had a consolidation this period of time.
960
961 ##05:46 -## When symmetry is broken it indicates there is a underlying trend or manipulation under way.
962
963 ##06:55 -## How long does it take for trades to come to fruition?
964
965 == {{id name="46"/}}46 - Interest Rate Differentials ==
966
967 ##00:13 -## Lesson 2: Interest rate differentials.
968
969 ##02:26 -## How do you pick a currency to be a buyer or seller of?
970
971 ##04:20 -## First thing you do is look for a country with a high interest rate.
972
973 ##06:40 -## We wait for smart money clues that it’s being bought.
974
975 ##08:17 -## The magnitude of the move in the Aussie Dollar.
976
977 ##10:02 -## Why the Australian dollar is going higher -.
978
979 ##11:47 -## Determining the forex pair that couples for the trade.
980
981 ##13:33 -## The Dollar-Yen pair is actually going to strengthen or go up.
982
983 ##15:30 -## Using differentials to trade on a higher time-frame premise.
984
985 ##16:57 -## Looking at the interest rate differentials between the weaker and higher yielding currencies.
986
987 == {{id name="47"/}}47 - How To Use Intermarket Analysis ==
988
989 ##00:12 -## How to use inter-market analysis to understand world markets.
990
991 ##02:30 -## Lead time and lag time for market relationships.
992
993 ##05:00 -## What are the four major groups for market analysis?
994
995 ##07:04 -## The US Dollar vs Commodities relationship.
996
997 ##09:18 -## Bonds vs Commodities.
998
999 ##11:34 -## The CRB Index is heavily weighted with agricultural and grain markets.
1000
1001 ##12:55 -## The bond market is a leading indicator of the stock market.
1002
1003 ##15:08 -## Key Intermarket Relationships.
1004
1005 ##16:13 -## If you have a good sample size of these things in alignment with your long term analysis, you’re on the right path.
1006
1007 ##18:10 -## There’s no guarantee that nothing out there can’t change on the drop of a hat.
1008
1009 == {{id name="48"/}}48 - How To Use Bullish Seasonal Tendencies In HTF Analysis ==
1010
1011 ##00:14 -## Applying seasonal tendencies to higher-timeframe analysis.
1012
1013 ##01:57 -## Seasonal tendencies in the currency market.
1014
1015 ##03:48 -## Seasonal tendencies in the Canadian dollar.
1016
1017 ##06:25 -## How does the US-Canadian Dollar pair work?
1018
1019 ##08:54 -## Looking at the seasonal tendency in 2009 and 2012.
1020
1021 ##11:17 -## How to take the seasonal tendency from the futures contract.
1022
1023 ##13:51 -## Looking at a market that is closely related to the Canadian dollar.
1024
1025 ##16:07 -## Seasonal tendency charts are like treasure maps.
1026
1027 ##17:27 -## Seasonal tendencies in currency pairs and asset classes.
1028
1029 == {{id name="49"/}}49 - How To Use Bearish Seasonal Tendencies In HTF Analysis ==
1030
1031 ##00:13 -## Introduction to today’s lesson.
1032
1033 ##02:59 -## Using seasonal tendencies as a roadmap for the future.
1034
1035 ##07:26 -## Will it happen every single year? No.
1036
1037 ##10:00 -## Seasonal tendencies in the kiwi.
1038
1039 ##14:59 -## How seasonal tendencies can be used as guides to lead us to the next trading opportunity.
1040
1041 ##17:46 -## If we’re in a bullish market, the February to June and July time periods are going to be phenomenal buying opportunities.
1042
1043 ##22:47 -## Bearish and bullish seasonal tendencies in the Kiwi.
1044
1045 ##25:04 -## How the bullish March April seasonal tendency works.
1046
1047 ##29:41 -## How do these ideas lead to a roadmap idea of where price should go? When do they usually occur?
1048
1049 ##31:25 -## The importance of seasonal tendencies in your trading.
1050
1051 == {{id name="50"/}}50 - Ideal Seasonal Tendencies ==
1052
1053 ##00:16 -## Introduction to today’s episode.
1054
1055 ##01:44 -## What is the strongest seasonal tendency for the Australian Dollar?
1056
1057 ##04:14 -## The best scenario for the euro/dollar pair.
1058
1059 ##06:26 -## The British Pound’s seasonal tendency.
1060
1061 ##07:44 -## US Dollar vs. Swiss franc.
1062
1063 ##10:13 -## Seasonal tendencies for the dollar and CAD.
1064
1065 ##12:16 -## How to use seasonal tendencies in trading.
1066
1067 == {{id name="51"/}}51 - Money Management ==
1068
1069 ##00:16 -## Lesson #5: Money Management -.
1070
1071 ##03:00 -## You have to have a realistic expectation coming in -.
1072
1073 ##05:20 -## Investors like to see that you’re not 100% exposed -.
1074
1075 ##10:05 -## The importance of using higher-timeframe analysis in your trading.
1076
1077 ##12:27 -## If you’re a long-term trader or position trader, you have to be able to anticipate these types of things.
1078
1079 ##16:39 -## Your stops have to be proportionate to the timeframe you’re trading in.
1080
1081 ##19:01 -## How to take positions off at logical areas of resistance -.
1082
1083 ##21:14 -## You have to fit your inner trader -.
1084
1085 ##26:39 -## What is your goal for the rest of this mentorship?
1086
1087 ##28:48 -## When you expose a client to risk enough times, eventually that risk will grow teeth -.
1088
1089 == {{id name="52"/}}52 - Defining HTF PD Arrays ==
1090
1091 ##00:17 -## Defining high-time-frame PDArrays.
1092
1093 ##01:23 -## The problem with technical analysis as a whole is it doesn’t help you.
1094
1095 ##03:23 -## What will propel price away from current market action higher?
1096
1097 ##07:39 -## Where would you reasonably expect price to trade in the short-term?
1098
1099 ##09:18 -## How price moves from one level to the next -.
1100
1101 ##13:54 -## When you’re studying price, you are submitting to the price.
1102
1103 ##17:00 -## What should I be looking for in order of importance?
1104
1105 ##19:49 -## What to look for in the next order.
1106
1107 ##24:11 -## What to look for when looking for a bearish breaker in a premium market.
1108
1109 ##26:34 -## What is the order in which you would expect to see these arrays in price action?
1110
1111 == {{id name="53"/}}53 - Trade Conditions & Setup Progressions ==
1112
1113 ##00:18 -## Lesson 6.2 - The 1200 pip move.
1114
1115 ##01:35 -## What are the main objectives of this teaching?
1116
1117 ##03:41 -## When markets are at a premium or a discount, markets will initially look to rebalance.
1118
1119 ##05:44 -## Daily and monthly charts of the yen.
1120
1121 ##08:20 -## Equal lows and bullish order blocks.
1122
1123 ##13:28 -## Daily and Weekly Charts -.
1124
1125 ##16:20 -## Down candles are where institutions are going to buy at the time of the down candle.
1126
1127 ##18:45 -## What does a bullish order block mean on a daily chart?
1128
1129 ##20:54 -## The bearish order block on the weekly chart.
1130
1131 ##23:08 -## What does the PDA look like on a daily chart?
1132
1133 == {{id name="54"/}}54 - Stop Entry Techniques For Long Term Traders ==
1134
1135 ##00:13 -## Stop Entry Techniques for Long-Term Traders.
1136
1137 ##02:23 -## Buying off of a down candle.
1138
1139 ##03:53 -## When price moves away from the opening price and comes right back down, you are looking for confirmation you’re looking for new buying.
1140
1141 ##05:52 -## Selling with stop orders with a bullish candle.
1142
1143 ##07:02 -## Selling on a stop at the opening price -.
1144
1145 ##08:40 -## Example of a bullish/bearish candle.
1146
1147 ##10:56 -## Using his idea for selling short the yen.
1148
1149 ##12:51 -## Over 1000 pips available in terms of downside potential -.
1150
1151 == {{id name="55"/}}55 - Limit Order Entry Techniques For Long Term Traders ==
1152
1153 ##00:10 -## Using limit entry techniques for long-term traders -.
1154
1155 ##01:40 -## When we start talking about swing trading, we can utilize the information in that module to help get better fills on the long-term entries closer to
1156
1157 ##02:58 -## Selling with limit orders -.
1158
1159 ##04:22 -## Daily PD arrays are best suited when we align them with daily charts.
1160
1161 ##05:42 -## When that occurs and you have really low risk, high probability entry patterns at your disposal, this is one of the most amazing ones you’
1162
1163 ##07:02 -## Daily and weekly charts.
1164
1165 ##09:27 -## When you’re in a suppressed, undervalued market, the market will seek to move to a premium.
1166
1167 == {{id name="56"/}}56 - Position Trade Management ==
1168
1169 ##00:15 -## Introduction to today’s episode.
1170
1171 ##02:09 -## Inter-Market Analysis.
1172
1173 ##04:27 -## When we have these things in alignment, we have a great deal with high probability scenarios.
1174
1175 ##05:49 -## Why are we looking for the lowest low in the last 40 trading days?
1176
1177 ##08:32 -## What are the bearish market conditions for the next quarterly shift?
1178
1179 ##11:34 -## If you’re going to be selling on a limit, you may not get your fill.
1180
1181 ##14:11 -## You want to lock in as much profit as possible if you use the highest high in the last 40 trading days and you see a deep retr
1182
1183 ##15:56 -## Examples of the Japanese yen.
1184
1185 ##18:45 -## The day you would trade -.
1186
1187 ##20:58 -## Looking back on the last 40 trading days.
1188
1189 = Month 6 =
1190
1191 == {{id name="57"/}}57 - Ideal Swings Conditions For Any Market ==
1192
1193 ##00:18 -## What is swing trading?
1194
1195 ##02:21 -## Market profiles matter -.
1196
1197 ##04:23 -## Trading markets on higher timeframe charts are indicative of major players buying or selling that asset.
1198
1199 ##06:51 -## Be willing to err on the direction, avoid the temptation.
1200
1201 ##08:00 -## If the monthly and weekly charts suggest that you should be a buyer, then obviously we should be focusing on being a swing trader on long side.
1202
1203 ##10:08 -## What are you looking for in the Euro Dollar?
1204
1205 ##12:26 -## Kiwi vs the Dollar.
1206
1207 ##14:47 -## Daily chart of the pair.
1208
1209 ##16:41 -## How much price has moved in these swing trades.
1210
1211 ##18:30 -## Swing trading is looking for directional trades.
1212
1213 == {{id name="58"/}}58 - Elements To Successful Swing Trading ==
1214
1215 ##00:11 -## What are the hallmarks of successful swing trading?
1216
1217 ##02:00 -## The more things on the list you have in your favor, the more likely the trade will pan out.
1218
1219 ##04:08 -## Are there signs in relative strength analysis to support the trade?
1220
1221 ##06:43 -## When you’re looking for your setups, look for markets that have clear price action and very discernible levels.
1222
1223 ##08:56 -## Is it likely or probable? Is it probable?
1224
1225 ##10:45 -## Just because you have a trade, it doesn’t mean you have to break your money management rules.
1226
1227 ##13:42 -## What is a mock trading plan?
1228
1229 ##17:11 -## Don’t pass on this exercise! You have to have it in paper!
1230
1231 ##19:43 -## What would change the process mid-trade if you had a plan?
1232
1233 == {{id name="59"/}}59 - Classic Swing Trading Approach ==
1234
1235 ##00:25 -## What is a classic swing trading approach?
1236
1237 ##01:43 -## What do you look through above and below the marketplace in order?
1238
1239 ##05:54 -## Looking at the monthly and weekly charts for bullish and bearish opportunities.
1240
1241 ##10:31 -## How do you arrive at the conclusion that the higher timeframe is bullish?
1242
1243 ##12:36 -## How do you time a market retracement?
1244
1245 ##17:02 -## What you need to look for in your discount matrix.
1246
1247 ##22:10 -## The ideal scenario is to trade setups to offer at least three times the range between your entry and the closest premium array from all timeframes.
1248
1249 ##25:08 -## Swing Trade Progression.
1250
1251 ##30:31 -## What is a swing trade?
1252
1253 ##35:37 -## How to use the four-hour premium array.
1254
1255 == {{id name="60"/}}60 - High Probability Swing Trade Setups In Bull Markets ==
1256
1257 ##00:12 -## Introduction to this month’s lesson.
1258
1259 ##01:09 -## What are you looking for on the monthly charts?
1260
1261 ##07:42 -## Examples of high- probability swing trading.
1262
1263 ##11:04 -## Chart of the Day -.
1264
1265 ##13:29 -## The monthly and weekly charts are bullish.
1266
1267 ##18:12 -## When prices are careening down candles, you want to be noting them and what it does.
1268
1269 ##23:26 -## The catalyst for silver’s recent surge.
1270
1271 ##25:53 -## What are we looking for in these ideas?
1272
1273 ##30:32 -## How to use these charts to find buying opportunities -.
1274
1275 ##35:09 -## The importance of having order blocks in your charts.
1276
1277 == {{id name="61"/}}61 - High Probability Swing Trade Setups In Bear Markets ==
1278
1279 ##00:10 -## Introduction to today’s episode.
1280
1281 ##01:42 -## When all three timeframes are bearish you’re going to be looking to sell all daily bearish premium arrays.
1282
1283 ##06:26 -## Daily chart showing the bullish candles.
1284
1285 ##07:44 -## Weekly bearish order block chart.
1286
1287 ##12:18 -## What’s in this chart?
1288
1289 ##14:43 -## Bearish Order Block #2.
1290
1291 ##19:19 -## Bearish order blocks in the market.
1292
1293 ##21:27 -## Swing trades that could be two weeks to one month.
1294
1295 ##24:20 -## All green candles are resistance levels.
1296
1297 ##26:48 -## Daily and weekly levels are the most sensitive.
1298
1299 == {{id name="62"/}}62 - Reducing Risk and Maximizing Potential Reward In Swing Setups ==
1300
1301 ##00:14 -## Introduction to this month's topic.
1302
1303 ##01:07 -## What are you looking for in this list?
1304
1305 ##05:23 -## Frame your trade on a monthly and weekly level.
1306
1307 ##07:03 -## Three to 1 reward-to-risk ratio.
1308
1309 ##11:06 -## What is the maximum multiples you need to get from these trades?
1310
1311 ##12:39 -## If you think you have to do a lot to do well in this business, you are mistaken.
1312
1313 ##16:41 -## You don’t need very much return to keep doing well -.
1314
1315 ##19:04 -## An example of how you can use this framework to double your equity every single year.
1316
1317 ##23:44 -## Can we have a 70-pip stop-loss?
1318
1319 ##25:34 -## Introduction to this week's homework.
1320
1321 == {{id name="63"/}}63 - Keys To Selecting Markets That Will Move Explosively ==
1322
1323 ##00:14 -## The keys to select markets that will move explosively.
1324
1325 ##01:45 -## If we think that there is a bullish dollar, we should see commodities at resistance levels of close across the major sectors.
1326
1327 ##03:29 -## Co2 hedging program alignment and open interest.
1328
1329 ##05:31 -## What is a “trending” profile?
1330
1331 ##10:30 -## Is the dollar supported in other asset classes or other markets?
1332
1333 ##12:40 -## How do you use the CIT hedging program alignment data to determine whether there is going to be an explosive high probability swing trade?
1334
1335 ##14:25 -## Looking at long-term net short positions in a commodity.
1336
1337 ##18:41 -## The red line is a sign that the commercial traders are reducing their short positions.
1338
1339 ##20:57 -## What is a volatility filter?
1340
1341 ##23:19 -## News headlines that set the tone for a bullish or bearish market.
1342
1343 == {{id name="64"/}}64 - The Million Dollar Swing Setup ==
1344
1345 ##00:08 -## Introduction to the Million Dollar Swing Setup.
1346
1347 ##02:43 -## The process for finding seasonal tendency.
1348
1349 ##08:07 -## Swing Trade Conditions:.
1350
1351 ##12:17 -## Top-down analysis process.
1352
1353 ##16:27 -## Stop loss from initial placement until price moves 1/3 of your intended direction.
1354
1355 ##22:04 -## Commodities are oversold sentiment wise now.
1356
1357 ##23:58 -## Looking for the midpoint of the price swing from 1142.
1358
1359 ##28:32 -## The second portion of the price swing.
1360
1361 ##30:35 -## When are you buying on a stop loss and when are you selling on a limit? What are the conditions?
1362
1363 ##34:29 -## Swing trading is a process. You have to be patient.
1364
1365 = Month 7 =
1366
1367 == {{id name="65"/}}65 - Short Term Trading Using Monthly & Weekly Ranges ==
1368
1369 ##00:10 -## Lesson 1: Short-term trading.
1370
1371 ##02:07 -## Short-term trading is the highest probability discipline.
1372
1373 ##07:32 -## How to frame your risk reward model -.
1374
1375 ##12:38 -## When looking for shorting opportunities, we’re moving from a monthly chart to a weekly chart.
1376
1377 ##15:11 -## What are you looking for in a discount array?
1378
1379 ##20:59 -## Identifying the weekly premium level as a target.
1380
1381 ##26:59 -## What are we looking for in this scenario?
1382
1383 ##30:10 -## What kill zones could you be trading in?
1384
1385 ##34:05 -## The Japanese Yen’s fractal and higher-time frame analysis.
1386
1387 ##39:37 -## Daily and Weekly Premium Array Chart.
1388
1389 == {{id name="66"/}}66 - Short Term Trading Defining Weekly Range Profiles ==
1390
1391 ##00:11 -## Defining the weekly range profiles.
1392
1393 ##01:00 -## The classic Tuesday low of the week.
1394
1395 ##03:20 -## High of the Week: Wednesdays London Open and New York Session.
1396
1397 ##04:40 -## Consolidation Thursday Reversal.
1398
1399 ##06:22 -## Consolidation mid-week rally -.
1400
1401 ##07:46 -## What is a neutral or low probability market profile?
1402
1403 ##09:00 -## How to anticipate this when the market is trading at a long-term or intermediate term high price.
1404
1405 == {{id name="67"/}}67 - Short Term Trading Market Maker Manipulation Templates ==
1406
1407 ##00:11 -## Lesson 3: Market Maker Manipulation Templates.
1408
1409 ##02:06 -## Classic Tuesday Low The Week Scenario.
1410
1411 ##07:28 -## Classic Tuesday High of the Week Scenarios.
1412
1413 ##13:48 -## Reflection Pattern -.
1414
1415 ##16:24 -## What are the four stages of the trade?
1416
1417 ##20:18 -## Looking for a retest to an old low in front of a premium market.
1418
1419 ##26:13 -## What is a bullish market profile? -.
1420
1421 ##27:48 -## What looks like an example for the buy side.
1422
1423 ##31:49 -## What to Expect From This Market.
1424
1425 ##36:12 -## How to find bullish or bearish characteristics in the market.
1426
1427 == {{id name="68"/}}68 - Short Term Trading Blending IPDA Data Ranges and PD Arrays ==
1428
1429 ##00:09 -## Lesson 4: Blending data ranges and PD arrays for short term trading.
1430
1431 ##01:17 -## The order in which the algorithm will seek the respective price reference points.
1432
1433 ##03:03 -## When we look at price in the form of the PD array matrix, a good practice is to simply go through your price charts and look for where
1434
1435 ##04:39 -## When we refer to time and price, we’re blending both of the components.
1436
1437 ##06:38 -## Looking back over the last 20 trading days.
1438
1439 ##08:59 -## Looking for bearish and bullish mitigation blocks.
1440
1441 ##10:36 -## If we move down into a four-hour chart, you can see how price moves from one PD array to the next.
1442
1443 ##11:53 -## Looking for bearish ideas inside of the premium range.
1444
1445 ##13:22 -## Looking at the days of the week chart.
1446
1447 == {{id name="69"/}}69 - Short Term Trading Low Resistance Liquidity Runs Part 1 ==
1448
1449 ##00:15 -## Lesson 5 - Short-term trading.
1450
1451 ##02:03 -## Case Study #1 - The British Pound.
1452
1453 ##04:31 -## Drawing a horizontal line on my daily chart.
1454
1455 ##06:46 -## Identifying the PD arrays in each new trading range.
1456
1457 ##09:17 -## Looking at price ranges from a premium and discount perspective.
1458
1459 ##14:08 -## What we’re looking for in this chart.
1460
1461 ##16:27 -## What is a discount market in a premium market?
1462
1463 ##17:32 -## The premium array area is the highest portion of price in this consolidation.
1464
1465 ##19:29 -## The importance of doing your own study.
1466
1467 ##21:08 -## The best buys are going to be in the lower half of the overall consolidation.
1468
1469 == {{id name="70"/}}70 - Short Term Trading Low Resistance Liquidity Runs Part 2 ==
1470
1471 ##00:04 -## Introduction to today’s lesson.
1472
1473 ##02:09 -## What’s the basis of the swing up from a discount market?
1474
1475 ##03:48 -## The 4 Hour Chart -.
1476
1477 ##05:05 -## When we look at price like this on our chart, it’s very easy to see where price will reach up.
1478
1479 ##08:05 -## Looking at the four-hour chart.
1480
1481 ##10:15 -## What is the master blueprint for trading?
1482
1483 ##12:07 -## Looking at the grades of a trading range or a price swing.
1484
1485 ##17:15 -## Where does the market trade down? -.
1486
1487 ##19:06 -## An example of a bearish/bearish order block.
1488
1489 ##21:29 -## What happens in the first week of a bullish/bearish breakout.
1490
1491 == {{id name="71"/}}71 -  Intraweek Market Reversals and Overlapping Models ==
1492
1493 ##00:08 -## Introduction to this week’s lesson.
1494
1495 ##02:33 -## What is a weak market reversal profile?
1496
1497 ##04:15 -## Identifying the risk of a reversal in the market.
1498
1499 ##08:30 -## What was the catalyst that led to the reversal in price?
1500
1501 ##10:39 -## A look at a four-hour chart of the market.
1502
1503 ##14:28 -## When central banks reprice, it’s based on central bank intervention.
1504
1505 ##15:33 -## What’s going on with the market.
1506
1507 ##18:15 -## What does it mean to be a market maker?
1508
1509 ##22:23 -## Knowing the higher timeframe will aid in failures.
1510
1511 ##24:13 -## Consider swing trading model overlap possibilities -.
1512
1513 == {{id name="72"/}}72 - One Shot One Kill Model ==
1514
1515 ##00:10 -## What does it require to do these efficiently and successfully?
1516
1517 ##02:07 -## Why you need to understand the CRT or commitment of traders analysis and commercial hedging programs.
1518
1519 ##06:20 -## The first thing we do when we look at our market is use the Eurodollar as an example.
1520
1521 ##10:15 -## One Shot One Kill Setup on a Euro Dollar.
1522
1523 ##12:07 -## How do you know when the high is going to happen?
1524
1525 ##16:12 -## Commodity Futures Trading Commission Commitment of traders report data.
1526
1527 ##20:33 -## How do we use this graph to justify these ideas?
1528
1529 ##22:43 -## Looking at the market from a macro standpoint.
1530
1531 ##27:23 -## How far into the weekly bearish order block would you expect the euro to trade into the week?
1532
1533 ##33:05 -## How do you get to the results that you saw this week?
1534
1535 = Month 8 =
1536
1537 == {{id name="73"/}}73 - Essentials To ICT Daytrading ==
1538
1539 ##00:11 -## Introduction to this month’s content.
1540
1541 ##02:45 -## The importance of directional bias in day trading setups.
1542
1543 ##07:37 -## Looking at monthly, daily, weekly and daily PDA arrays in the last 40 and 60 trading days.
1544
1545 ##11:38 -## Looking for day trades at the London session open.
1546
1547 ##16:31 -## What time of day is the best time to take advantage of the London session.
1548
1549 ##21:19 -## What’s the best day to trade for day trades?
1550
1551 ##23:35 -## The weekly range framework for the market.
1552
1553 ##29:19 -## How to use this chart to find opportunities.
1554
1555 ##35:08 -## Daily rejection block premium vs. old low discount.
1556
1557 ##41:45 -## What is your scenario for this week?
1558
1559 == {{id name="74"/}}74 - Defining The Daily Range ==
1560
1561 ##00:14 -## Lesson #2 - Defining the daily range.
1562
1563 ##01:14 -## If it’s going to be a high probability trade scenario, it stands to reason we have to start with the same reference point that the
1564
1565 ##02:33 -## Beginning and endings of all the references and time.
1566
1567 ##04:55 -## What is a true day?
1568
1569 ##06:16 -## Looking at the New York time.
1570
1571 ##07:20 -## CME Open and London Close.
1572
1573 == {{id name="75"/}}75 - Central Bank Dealers Range ==
1574
1575 ##00:00 -## Lesson 3: Central Bank Dealers Range -.
1576
1577 ##01:02 -## What is the central bank dealers range?
1578
1579 ##03:05 -## Most sell days will create the low of the day from the central bank dealers range.
1580
1581 ##04:34 -## The time period that frames the central bank’s range is 2pm to 8pm New York Time.
1582
1583 ##06:34 -## The central bank dealers range has to be used in conjunction with the central bank’s range in order to work.
1584
1585 ##08:43 -## Using the Central Bank Dealers Range using the bodies of candles.
1586
1587 ##10:41 -## Explanation of the example in this section.
1588
1589 ##11:54 -## What is the ideal range for day trading?
1590
1591 ##13:08 -## If it trades beyond that we don’t want to see it trade more than 40 pips.
1592
1593 ##14:27 -## When we look at price, we have to have a bias.
1594
1595 == {{id name="76"/}}76 - Projecting Daily Highs and Lows ==
1596
1597 ##00:11 -## Lesson 4: Projecting daily highs and lows using the central bank dealers range.
1598
1599 ##02:56 -## The Central Bank Dealers Range.
1600
1601 ##05:23 -## What is a bullish order block? -.
1602
1603 ##07:49 -## Example #1 - The London Kill Zone.
1604
1605 ##12:52 -## Drawing the High and Low of the Day.
1606
1607 ##15:59 -## Mock-up of daily range.
1608
1609 ##17:47 -## Time limit on this candle -.
1610
1611 ##22:52 -## How many standard deviations do you need to apply to your strategy?
1612
1613 ##25:21 -## Using the things you’ve learned so far doesn’t equate to getting money every single day.
1614
1615 ##26:42 -## The science behind calling the daily high and low.
1616
1617 == {{id name="77"/}}77 - Intraday Profiles ==
1618
1619 ##00:16 -## Introduction to intraday market profiles.
1620
1621 ##01:26 -## What is a classic or higher probability sell day?
1622
1623 ##04:11 -## If the Central Bank Dealers range is greater than 40 pips, that means it has been extended further.
1624
1625 ##06:22 -## What is an ideal stage set for the market?
1626
1627 ##08:35 -## When do you look for a rally in the market?
1628
1629 ##11:28 -## Intra-Market Profile -.
1630
1631 ##13:52 -## An example of the London delayed protraction profile.
1632
1633 ##15:26 -## What to look for in the market at midnight.
1634
1635 ##17:49 -## The London setup for today.
1636
1637 ##20:17 -## How to find the best London open setups.
1638
1639 == {{id name="78"/}}78 - When To Avoid The London Session ==
1640
1641 ##00:12 -## When is the London session not ideal?
1642
1643 ##01:22 -## What to avoid after a large range day.
1644
1645 ##05:59 -## What news releases are market drivers that are going to be released through out the week?
1646
1647 ##08:33 -## What characteristics do I look for to look for in an avoidance of London session?
1648
1649 ##13:39 -## What are the characteristics that make London session entries perfect?
1650
1651 ##15:58 -## What do you look for in the market when these events are happening?
1652
1653 ##20:37 -## How do we formulate an ideal scenario going into London?
1654
1655 ##23:09 -## What happens if the average daily range has not recently exceeded its 5-day average range?
1656
1657 ##28:17 -## Rule-based trading days.
1658
1659 ##30:47 -## How to stay out of the marketplace.
1660
1661 == {{id name="79"/}}79 - High Probability Daytrade Setups ==
1662
1663 ##00:17 -## What makes day trades high- probability?
1664
1665 ##02:12 -## What’s the highest and lowest high during the London session?
1666
1667 ##07:17 -## What are the ideal days of the week to buy?
1668
1669 ##09:48 -## What are some of my favorite setups?
1670
1671 ##13:57 -## What to use for your initial stop loss.
1672
1673 ##16:27 -## Taking profits in by day trades -.
1674
1675 ##20:20 -## Criteria for shorting short day trades.
1676
1677 ##22:01 -## What to look for in a short term bullish/bearish order block.
1678
1679 ##25:20 -## Taking profits and short-day trades.
1680
1681 ##26:56 -## Any of the above scenarios can be combined with a premium PDR to make a profit.
1682
1683 == {{id name="80"/}}80 - Integrating Daytrades With HTF Trade Entries ==
1684
1685 ##00:06 -## Importance of integrating day trades with higher timeframe trade entries.
1686
1687 ##01:28 -## What is a daily candle?
1688
1689 ##03:15 -## Avoid the London session -.
1690
1691 ##05:02 -## Where are we moving from a discount to a premium?
1692
1693 ##07:06 -## How do you know when to buy or sell a stock?
1694
1695 ##10:13 -## What if you can’t be up during the London protraction?
1696
1697 ##12:46 -## How to use day trading concepts to get into your higher timeframe trade entries.
1698
1699 ##14:26 -## What can we do with that in regards to intraday?
1700
1701 ##16:05 -## What are we accomplishing here?
1702
1703 ##18:55 -## Selling at zero gmt and using the last five day average daily range as your protective stop.
1704
1705 = Month 9 =
1706
1707 == {{id name="81"/}}81 - The Sentiment Effect ==
1708
1709 ##00:11 -## Introduction to this month’s lesson.
1710
1711 ##01:50 -## What is the opening price?
1712
1713 ##03:23 -## What are the conditions for a buy-in-day trade?
1714
1715 ##05:02 -## What happens if the price declines under the opening price.
1716
1717 ##06:33 -## Why did the price go up?
1718
1719 ##08:03 -## Daily and minimum for our premium array is in play.
1720
1721 ##10:11 -## Why day trading is not an everyday trading.
1722
1723 == {{id name="82"/}}82 - Filling The Numbers ==
1724
1725 ##00:12 -## Lesson #2: Fill the numbers.
1726
1727 ##02:08 -## What are zero-gmt pivots?
1728
1729 ##04:38 -## What is a pivot point?
1730
1731 ##06:20 -## How many levels can be filled on a large range day?
1732
1733 ##10:37 -## Using the order flow direction and Pda-rate matrix for specific bias utilizing the Asian range.
1734
1735 ##13:04 -## What you end up with is two new ranges.
1736
1737 ##15:52 -## How do you decide which numbers to use for the daily range?
1738
1739 ##21:29 -## If you’ve already started thinking this is getting too complicated, you need to dig your heels in.
1740
1741 ##23:42 -## How do you get to daily highs and lows?
1742
1743 ##25:06 -## This week’s low was most likely forming on Thursday.
1744
1745 == {{id name="83"/}}83 - 20 Pips Per Day ==
1746
1747 ##00:17 -## Lesson #3: 20 Pips per Day.
1748
1749 ##02:21 -## When I was active trading Asia, this is one of the ways I did it.
1750
1751 ##04:51 -## An example of a short term high forming before the Asian session starts.
1752
1753 ##07:13 -## Another example of a short-term high during the Asian session.
1754
1755 ##08:59 -## When you trade above the short-term high, you’re looking to sell short.
1756
1757 ##11:20 -## Scalping 20 Pips -.
1758
1759 ##13:46 -## Example #2 - Aussie Dollar.
1760
1761 ##16:42 -## The opposite of two opportunities in the currency.
1762
1763 == {{id name="84"/}}84 - Trading In Consolidations ==
1764
1765 ##00:15 -## What is trading in consolidations? -.
1766
1767 ##01:24 -## What does smart money do when it comes to consolidations?
1768
1769 ##02:55 -## Retail traders buy the previous low and sell the previous high -.
1770
1771 ##04:59 -## When the market is bearish on a daily or four-hour in terms of its order flow, this subordination factor is going to be seen
1772
1773 ##06:51 -## Short-term high vs. long-term low.
1774
1775 ##09:39 -## Retail traders are going to be referencing old highs, old lows, and old lows.
1776
1777 ##12:23 -## When we have these conditions, we don’t anticipate or always hold for the opposite end of the consolidation.
1778
1779 ##13:32 -## Retail traders see this as an old-high classic support resistance.
1780
1781 ##14:51 -## When the daily or order flow is bearish and the price moves away from the equilibrium price point.
1782
1783 ##17:22 -## When markets go into consolidation, it’s an opportunity for us to fade that and do the opposite.
1784
1785 == {{id name="85"/}}85 - Trading Market Reversals ==
1786
1787 ##00:11 -## Introduction to trading previous day’s highs.
1788
1789 ##02:30 -## How can I sell above an old high and not fear it continuing going higher?
1790
1791 ##07:08 -## What is a run above an old high?
1792
1793 ##09:47 -## New York Session Reversals.
1794
1795 ##13:19 -## Trading previous day’s highs and lows.
1796
1797 ##18:47 -## When you see an overlap of these types of reversal concepts on your charts.
1798
1799 ##21:01 -## An example of trading intra-week lows in the market.
1800
1801 ##25:00 -## When a market lacks directional trend and one-sidedness, they offer more opportunities to trade like this than not.
1802
1803 ##26:49 -## What is a market order? What is a reversal?
1804
1805 ##32:18 -## How London Close can be used for intraday reversals on large-range days.
1806
1807 == {{id name="86"/}}86 - Bread and Butter Buy Setups ==
1808
1809 ##00:00 -## Lesson 6: Day trading and scalping.
1810
1811 ##00:54 -## The first price engine model is repricing.
1812
1813 ##03:54 -## Realistic objectives for scalping.
1814
1815 ##07:44 -## When the market is poised to trade higher.
1816
1817 ##10:13 -## What is the London Open?
1818
1819 ##15:14 -## What happens when the London kill zone closes and the market goes quiet.
1820
1821 ##17:37 -## Scalping in New York.
1822
1823 ##20:30 -## What’s the Judas Swing?
1824
1825 ##25:02 -## How to trade long and close.
1826
1827 ##27:37 -## Daily ranges are formed using time of day.
1828
1829 == {{id name="87"/}}87 - Bread & Butter Sell Setups ==
1830
1831 ##00:08 -## How ETA’s price engine models work.
1832
1833 ##01:47 -## This model is called Offset Distribution.
1834
1835 ##04:05 -## Looking at the London Open and London Open.
1836
1837 ##06:51 -## Scalping the London Judas Swing.
1838
1839 ##12:14 -## What is the average daily range?
1840
1841 ##13:38 -## Average daily range can act as one half of the actual average daily range in some conditions.
1842
1843 ##15:26 -## How to take your full position off 15 pips before the average daily range is exceeded.
1844
1845 ##19:49 -## Using time and price to get a better idea of where the market is going.
1846
1847 ##22:01 -## There’s even tighter consolidations that we have had to contend with.
1848
1849 ##22:50 -## If you want to be in here as a hardliner, you can’t get a lot of volatility or bang for your buck -.
1850
1851 == {{id name="88"/}}88 - ICT Day Trade Routine ==
1852
1853 ##00:15 -## Daily Day Trade Routine.
1854
1855 ##03:23 -## How to find the last 60 trading days in the past.
1856
1857 ##09:20 -## High, low, breaker.
1858
1859 ##14:27 -## Institutional Order Flow for the Dollar Index.
1860
1861 ##17:39 -## How to use the charts in your own notes -.
1862
1863 ##24:32 -## Optimal trade entry in the euro.
1864
1865 ##31:13 -## How do we use this information?
1866
1867 ##33:23 -## Looking at the opening price when price trades down at this level.
1868
1869 ##38:41 -## How do you think about the weekly and daily templates?
1870
1871 ##44:11 -## You have to see things that justify the idea -.
1872
1873 ##46:20 -## How do you know if you’re bullish or bearish?
1874
1875 ##51:37 -## What I do on a daily basis -.
1876
1877 = Month 10 =
1878
1879 == {{id name="89"/}}89 - Commitment Of Traders ==
1880
1881 ##00:08 -## What is the commitment of traders report?
1882
1883 ##02:01 -## Commercial traders’ current hedging program -.
1884
1885 ##06:20 -## Commercial hedging and the yen.
1886
1887 ##09:00 -## Change your perspective on the market.
1888
1889 ##14:02 -## What price was doing the whole first half of 2016.
1890
1891 ##15:35 -## How to use Co2 data to figure out whether there’s buying or selling going on in the market.
1892
1893 ##20:13 -## Looking for the highest and lowest reading on their net position by the commercials -.
1894
1895 ##23:09 -## The Japanese yen’s recent rally in the last week of October.
1896
1897 ##27:11 -## What is the nature of hedging?
1898
1899 ##28:36 -## When we look at the commitment of traders report, we plot it on a traders basis.
1900
1901 == {{id name="90"/}}90 - Relative Strength Analysis - Accumulation & Distribution ==
1902
1903 ##00:03 -## Introduction to commodity trading lesson #2.
1904
1905 ##01:35 -## What is the most important market to follow when you are bullish?
1906
1907 ##05:49 -## Focus on the commodities that fail to make a lower low and the dollar index.
1908
1909 ##10:37 -## What are the characteristics of a sympathetic rally?
1910
1911 ##16:31 -## Leadership issues in the grains group.
1912
1913 ##21:30 -## Livestock complex.
1914
1915 ##23:40 -## Foods: Cocoa, Sugar, Cotton.
1916
1917 ##26:58 -## Financials - Commodities.
1918
1919 ##31:29 -## Currency and Commodities:.
1920
1921 ##35:59 -## What does the failure swing look like when the market should be trading higher?
1922
1923 == {{id name="91"/}}91 - Commodity Seasonals Tendencies - My Personal Favorites ==
1924
1925 ##00:02 -## Seasonal tendencies are not panaceas.
1926
1927 ##02:07 -## The seasonal tendency for the soy market.
1928
1929 ##07:01 -## Seasonal tendencies in soybeans.
1930
1931 ##12:55 -## Best time to look for shorts in the corn market.
1932
1933 ##15:33 -## What is a feeder cattle market?
1934
1935 ##20:19 -## Seasonal tendency in cattle.
1936
1937 ##24:31 -## Coffee and orange juice have seasonal tendencies.
1938
1939 ##26:38 -## When is the best time to be a buy?
1940
1941 ##32:15 -## Best time to be buying copper.
1942
1943 ##37:34 -## Seasonal Tendencies for Commodities.
1944
1945 == {{id name="92"/}}92 - Premium Vs. Carrying Charge Market ==
1946
1947 ##00:00 -## Commodity trading lesson.
1948
1949 ##02:08 -## What is a carrying charge market?
1950
1951 ##04:20 -## What does a premium mean for a commodity?
1952
1953 ##06:21 -## What is a commercial bull market?
1954
1955 ##08:40 -## What is a commercial bull market?
1956
1957 ##10:24 -## How to develop a spread chart.
1958
1959 ##12:35 -## Why cotton has been going higher.
1960
1961 ##14:41 -## Signs of a Buy Signal in Cotton.
1962
1963 ##17:06 -## When the market makes a higher high with a lower peak in the spread that does not promote or significant significantly confirm institutional buying, it’s
1964
1965 == {{id name="93"/}}93 - Open Interest Secrets & Smart Money Footprints ==
1966
1967 ##00:00 -## Introduction to the topic.
1968
1969 ##02:00 -## What is Open Interest?
1970
1971 ##03:40 -## Signs of open interest in trends.
1972
1973 ##05:49 -## What causes open interest?
1974
1975 ##06:45 -## What is open interest in the market?
1976
1977 ##09:03 -## How to get a better picture of open interest.
1978
1979 ##11:27 -## Open interest vs. seasonal average.
1980
1981 ##13:12 -## What’s at a long term support level at discount array?
1982
1983 ##15:04 -## Another example from the British Pound.
1984
1985 ##16:53 -## Open interest is not just about looking for support.
1986
1987 == {{id name="94"/}}94 - Bond Trading - Basics & Opening Range Concept ==
1988
1989 ##00:01 -## Introduction to this week’s lesson.
1990
1991 ##02:27 -## The only delivery contract missing is March 2018.
1992
1993 ##03:17 -## What is the bond market opening range?
1994
1995 ##05:36 -## Volume divergence in the 8am to 9am range.
1996
1997 ##08:04 -## Volume precedes price weakness in commodity markets.
1998
1999 ##10:22 -## The opening range for bonds.
2000
2001 ##12:23 -## The bond market is one of the least manipulated of all markets.
2002
2003 ##14:30 -## When it starts to move in one direction it generally stays in that direction. When it goes into consolidation, it can be a little choppy.
2004
2005 ##16:03 -## The bond market is a very good trading market.
2006
2007 == {{id name="95"/}}95 - Bond Trading - Split Session Rules ==
2008
2009 ##00:02 -## Introduction to this month’s lesson.
2010
2011 ##01:48 -## What is the New York session?
2012
2013 ##04:01 -## The am session has a built-in advantage.
2014
2015 ##06:22 -## What is the most common reference point in the bond market?
2016
2017 ##08:11 -## What is the New York PM session?
2018
2019 ##09:29 -## Defining the price action by way of split session rolls.
2020
2021 ##11:23 -## An example of a market reversal profile.
2022
2023 ##13:21 -## What’s a turtle soup?
2024
2025 ##15:15 -## What is the fair value gap? -.
2026
2027 ##16:31 -## How these ideas apply to price action -.
2028
2029 == {{id name="96"/}}96 - Bond Trading - Consolidation Days ==
2030
2031 ##00:00 -## Disclaimers: I am not a CTA.
2032
2033 ##01:27 -## The New York session vacuum will create a dead space in economic calendars.
2034
2035 ##03:24 -## What are the characteristics of consolidation days after a higher-timeframe premium or discount array is met?
2036
2037 ##06:46 -## What causes consolidation in the bond market?
2038
2039 ##09:02 -## When we have consolidation days when we are looking to trade in the am session.
2040
2041 ##14:03 -## Always allow your limit exits to exceed your targets because this gives you a bonus.
2042
2043 ##15:59 -## Keep overnight short-term highs and lows in mind for low resistance liquidity runs.
2044
2045 ##18:30 -## If you don’t have rules, you’ll never get an accurate measurement on your development.
2046
2047 ##20:18 -## The power of rule-based ideas.
2048
2049 ##22:55 -## Keep your perspective as a professional trader, not a casino trader.
2050
2051 == {{id name="97"/}}97 - Bond Trading - Trending Days ==
2052
2053 ##00:02 -## Introduction to today’s lesson.
2054
2055 ##01:03 -## What are the formation characteristics of volatility?
2056
2057 ##02:41 -## When you see those things, we can expect a expansion day on the downside from a premium array.
2058
2059 ##04:48 -## The lower low in the Treasury bond market.
2060
2061 ##06:55 -## Looking at the economic calendar for the New York session.
2062
2063 ##09:18 -## What is the catalyst for big movement in the bond market?
2064
2065 ##11:18 -## The bond market has a condition where it’s trading at a discount price -.
2066
2067 ##13:07 -## Looking at the economic calendar for April 18 2017.
2068
2069 ##14:21 -## Example #2 - Dollar rally vs. foreign currencies.
2070
2071 ##16:45 -## How FOMC and interest rates unlock the moves in the marketplace.
2072
2073 == {{id name="98"/}}98 - Index Futures - Basics and Opening Range Concept ==
2074
2075 ##00:00 -## Introduction to index trading and index futures.
2076
2077 ##00:46 -## E-mini S&P 500 trading session.
2078
2079 ##02:32 -## S&P trading opening range.
2080
2081 ##04:00 -## S&P 500 S&P September contract candle stick chart.
2082
2083 ##06:11 -## The opening range is an extended range and is extended here when we have that.
2084
2085 ##08:42 -## The largest volume during the morning session is the highest.
2086
2087 ##10:39 -## Looking at the opening range and time of day.
2088
2089 == {{id name="99"/}}99 - Index Futures - AM Trend ==
2090
2091 ##00:00 -## What is the AM trend?
2092
2093 ##02:01 -## Looking at the New York session using bar charts.
2094
2095 ##03:48 -## An example from the London overnight session.
2096
2097 ##06:11 -## Comparison of the London session to the New York session.
2098
2099 ##07:58 -## Comparison of relative highs and lows when institutional order flow is bearish.
2100
2101 ##10:30 -## Why more failed to do that when it’s bearish institutional order flow.
2102
2103 ##12:48 -## The importance of looking at a large sample size and bracketing out a specific time window -.
2104
2105 ##14:38 -## How to anticipate bullish and bearish trends in the market.
2106
2107 ##16:52 -## Index S&P Dividend Divergence -.
2108
2109 ##17:50 -## When it happens in price action, are you looking at the equities open at 930?
2110
2111 == {{id name="100"/}}100 - Index Futures - PM Trend ==
2112
2113 ##00:00 -## Introduction to today’s episode.
2114
2115 ##00:40 -## Definition of the 1pm to 1pm New York PM session.
2116
2117 ##02:21 -## The lunch hour in New York time.
2118
2119 ##03:34 -## What the market does between the 1pm and 4pm time windows.
2120
2121 ##05:29 -## The afternoon session can create a reversal.
2122
2123 ##07:26 -## Looking at the relative highs and lows between noon and 3pm New York time.
2124
2125 ##09:27 -## There is accumulation in the S&P not seen in the Nasdaq and the Dow.
2126
2127 ##11:08 -## The lunch hour and the resumption of trading.
2128
2129 == {{id name="101"/}}101 - Index Futures - Projected Range and Objectives ==
2130
2131 ##00:00 -## Introduction to today’s discussion.
2132
2133 ##01:21 -## The daily range could actually go straight through the lunch hour.
2134
2135 ##02:39 -## Don’t be lulled into thinking that if it’s a strong bull day that it will consolidate always the entire lunch hour.
2136
2137 ##04:28 -## When should you be focusing on a daily or weekly discount array?
2138
2139 ##06:47 -## What happens if the AM trend returns to a discount array then rallies the lunch hour.
2140
2141 ##09:26 -## Am-trend returns to a premium array, declines, then reverses.
2142
2143 ##11:13 -## Institutional order flow is going to be neutral or it’s unclear to you.
2144
2145 ##12:48 -## How do we know which one is going to run the lunchtime high?
2146
2147 ##14:18 -## What would you expect for the PM train if the am session blow trades down?
2148
2149 ##15:48 -## When markets are not predisposed to trade higher or lower with a trend, it’s simply consolidation.
2150
2151 == {{id name="102"/}}102 - Index Futures - Index Trade Setups ==
2152
2153 ##00:02 -## Introduction to this month’s discussion.
2154
2155 ##01:04 -## What are we looking for in this chart?
2156
2157 ##03:17 -## Holding for the maximum potential range.
2158
2159 ##05:20 -## Comparison of the S&P to the other two indices.
2160
2161 ##07:21 -## In the pm session, you have to rely on time of day.
2162
2163 ##09:34 -## What’s the catalyst for this market reversal?
2164
2165 ##12:02 -## Holding on to the later part of the day.
2166
2167 ##14:34 -## How do you determine which low is going to be formed in the afternoon session?
2168
2169 ##16:11 -## In the morning, we’re going to be comparing the index’s divergence at the lows against the dow, nas, and
2170
2171 ##18:11 -## An example of a consolidation am rally and PM decline.
2172
2173 == {{id name="103"/}}103 - Stock Trading - Seasonals and Monthly Swings ==
2174
2175 ##00:10 -## Lesson 1: Seasonal and monthly swings of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
2176
2177 ##01:50 -## There are three divisions in the year when it comes to stock trading.
2178
2179 ##03:44 -## What are the most important periods of the year for traders?
2180
2181 ##04:57 -## Seasonal influences per calendar month for the Dow Jones Industrial.
2182
2183 ##06:22 -## Looking at the entire calendar year in broad brush terms.
2184
2185 ##08:44 -## When the market is bullish and when it’s bearish -.
2186
2187 ##10:16 -## Case Study #1: February.
2188
2189 ##12:27 -## Month of March.
2190
2191 ##15:23 -## The month of May is part of a larger consolidation that has been seen in this year of the market.
2192
2193 ##16:19 -## Why you need to focus on times when the market is predisposed to go higher, not higher.
2194
2195 == {{id name="104"/}}104 - Stock Trading - Building Buy Watchlists ==
2196
2197 ##00:07 -## Building By Watch Lists.
2198
2199 ##02:36 -## When the market moves higher in high tide, all boats rise.
2200
2201 ##04:34 -## Dow Jones Industrial Average vs. Apple.
2202
2203 ##07:05 -## Dow Jones Industrial Average in February.
2204
2205 ##09:27 -## Dow Jones industrial overlay vs. the dow Jones.
2206
2207 ##11:43 -## The first is Apple, the second is Belling, the third is Disney, the fourth is Home Depot, the final one is Visa.
2208
2209 ##13:36 -## Apple (AAPL) -.
2210
2211 ##15:49 -## Comparison to Apple and Boeing charts.
2212
2213 ##17:49 -## Home Depot and McDonald's.
2214
2215 ##19:35 -## Looking for higher moves on the weekly chart -.
2216
2217 == {{id name="105"/}}105 - Stock Trading - Building Sell Watchlists ==
2218
2219 ##00:11 -## Lesson #3 - Building Sell Watch Lists.
2220
2221 ##01:40 -## Filter #1: The stock market must be poised to decline during bearish months.
2222
2223 ##03:21 -## Introduction to today’s lesson.
2224
2225 ##05:34 -## Caterpillar - May to July 2015.
2226
2227 ##07:19 -## Institutional order flow is bearish when the markets are bullish.
2228
2229 ##09:13 -## Walmart was the one that would have been thrown to the side of this list.
2230
2231 ##10:41 -## How do you know when you’re onto something?
2232
2233 ##12:09 -## How to use the Nasdaq 100 as a homework assignment.
2234
2235 == {{id name="106"/}}106 - Stock Trading - Using Options ==
2236
2237 ##00:13 -## Stock trading lesson for valuation stock selections.
2238
2239 ##02:19 -## Subscribe to Investor’s Business Daily with a four-week trial.
2240
2241 ##06:47 -## Cancelin’s Theory.
2242
2243 ##08:48 -## Looking for stocks with earnings growth in the last quarter.
2244
2245 ##13:32 -## The importance of supply and demand in investing.
2246
2247 ##17:40 -## How to track the participation of mutual funds and banks in stocks.
2248
2249 ##20:12 -## The importance of seasonal influences in the market.
2250
2251 ##24:15 -## Investor’s Business Daily -.
2252
2253 ##26:48 -## Investor’s Business Daily is a front running tool.
2254
2255 ##31:19 -## If you’re seeing that much of a return that’s what you are looking for -.
2256
2257 == {{id name="107"/}}107 - Importance Of Multi-Asset Analysis ==
2258
2259 ##00:24 -## What was the point of this month’s lessons?
2260
2261 ##02:24 -## When the bond market is going higher, it’s a risk-on environment. When the bond markets are going lower, it is a
2262
2263 ##04:03 -## The importance of understanding what the general market is going to do.
2264
2265 ##07:21 -## It takes a lot of work to be looking at other things -.
2266
2267 ##09:36 -## You have to know what the markets are going to do as a whole -.
2268
2269 ##13:11 -## You don’t have to be staring at the charts all day long.
2270
2271 ##14:22 -## It doesn’t take five minutes to do these things.
2272
2273 ##16:36 -## When you watch a slide, you think you know everything -.
2274
2275 ##21:22 -## What happens if a third asset class starts to behave as it should?
2276
2277 ##23:09 -## Why you need to start thinking about these four asset classes.
2278
2279 = Month 11 =
2280
2281 == {{id name="108"/}}108 - Commodity Mega-Trades ==
2282
2283 ##00:08 -## What are mega-trades and what are they?
2284
2285 ##02:11 -## Should you be a commodity specialist or a market trader?
2286
2287 ##06:48 -## Commodities in the financial markets.
2288
2289 ##09:17 -## A simple newspaper headline might be all that’s needed to draw a fundamental conclusion.
2290
2291 ##14:10 -## We don’t need a premium to be in a bullish commodity.
2292
2293 ##18:37 -## Looking at the relative lows across the grain markets.
2294
2295 ##21:44 -## Soybean and wheat prices in tandem.
2296
2297 ##26:22 -## Diversified approach in all the sectors will in theory increase the odds of capturing a mega-trade in one or more sectors.
2298
2299 ##29:17 -## How to find the strongest of the strong.
2300
2301 ##34:38 -## If you can find big moves, it’s going to happen in magnitude and in short order.
2302
2303 == {{id name="109"/}}109 - Forex and Currency Mega-Trades ==
2304
2305 ##00:05 -## Introduction to mega trades -.
2306
2307 ##01:03 -## Seasonal tendencies are important for megatrade selections.
2308
2309 ##03:26 -## The importance of the US Dollar Index.
2310
2311 ##06:12 -## What is relative strength analysis?
2312
2313 ##08:22 -## The second application is you want to be looking at the overlay tool that you can use for the MMT4 for forex markets.
2314
2315 ##10:11 -## Looking at relative strength using a candlestick chart vs. line-based chart.
2316
2317 ##11:55 -## Using relative strength analysis to find the strongest and weakest currencies.
2318
2319 ##14:18 -## Futures charts for the Australian, Australian, Canadian, and British Dollar.
2320
2321 ##16:54 -## How to find a “mega trade” in the forex market.
2322
2323 ##19:46 -## The second week of June 2017.
2324
2325 == {{id name="110"/}}110 - Stock Mega-Trades ==
2326
2327 ##00:00 -## Lesson #3: Looking for mega trades for stocks.
2328
2329 ##03:55 -## What are the odds of being successful in selecting high-flying stocks to meet your market direction?
2330
2331 ##10:14 -## How do you know if you’re a buyer or seller?
2332
2333 ##15:17 -## Investing for the future -.
2334
2335 ##20:46 -## The process for seeking mega trades in stocks -.
2336
2337 ##26:40 -## How to find the top 50 stocks in the S&P.
2338
2339 ##31:47 -## Stock of the Day - S&P 500.
2340
2341 ##36:43 -## How to go through 50 stocks in your list.
2342
2343 ##42:57 -## How to find one more move in this list.
2344
2345 ##46:47 -## How you can use IBD as an investment tool to sort through fundamentally strong companies.
2346
2347 == {{id name="111"/}}111 - Bond Mega-Trades ==
2348
2349 ##00:12 -## Looking for seasonal tendencies in the bond market.
2350
2351 ##02:21 -## What does it look like when looking for mega trades in the bond market?
2352
2353 ##07:20 -## You do not want to trade the bonds you want to see.
2354
2355 ##12:23 -## The three bond markets or treasury markets have to move in concert with one another if they diverge.
2356
2357 ##17:54 -## The 30-year Treasury bond chart.
2358
2359 ##23:07 -## Looking at the 5 year treasury note on September 12, 2010 and June 15, 2010.
2360
2361 ##25:31 -## Daily timeframe for the September 10, 2010 delivery contract.
2362
2363 ##29:52 -## Looking at the 30 year treasury bond.
2364
2365 ##34:26 -## Seasonal tendency in the bond market.
2366
2367 ##39:32 -## Another year of the bond market unfolds.
2368
2369 = Month 12 =
2370
2371 == {{id name="112"/}}112 - Long Term Top Down Analysis ==
2372
2373 ##00:09 -## Introduction to this month’s teaching.
2374
2375 ##03:16 -## What are seasonal tendencies?
2376
2377 ##08:00 -## Looking at the bond market and interest rates.
2378
2379 ##13:23 -## How do you know if you’re in an inflationary or deflationary condition?
2380
2381 ##18:37 -## How do you determine the next quarterly shift or market structure?
2382
2383 ##23:20 -## Defining the current market structure and recent highs.
2384
2385 ##29:13 -## Is the market consolidating? Is it trending? Is the market under a retracement? Are there signs of continuation?
2386
2387 ##33:51 -## How to calibrate the key price levels.
2388
2389 ##38:22 -## Using the Australian Dollar as an example.
2390
2391 ##43:24 -## Looking at the market profile.
2392
2393 ##48:47 -## Defining our PDA matrix.
2394
2395 == {{id name="113"/}}113 - Intermediate Term Top Down Analysis ==
2396
2397 ##00:16 -## Intermediate term top-down analysis weekly to daily.
2398
2399 ##02:42 -## What do you start with when doing a new week?
2400
2401 ##07:50 -## What is a weekly bias?
2402
2403 ##12:17 -## How do you build your sentiment reading?
2404
2405 ##17:53 -## Finding institutional focus points in the market.
2406
2407 ##23:55 -## How the price levels from the monthly and weekly are going to be used in the weekly.
2408
2409 ##28:30 -## Commodity Commitment Charts.
2410
2411 ##33:32 -## What’s going on in the market without the data.
2412
2413 ##39:12 -## Sentiment is like a virus -.
2414
2415 ##43:51 -## Market Profiling -.
2416
2417 == {{id name="114"/}}114 - Short Term Top Down Analysis ==
2418
2419 ##00:10 -## Short-term top-down analysis.
2420
2421 ##04:44 -## How do you know if you’re in a bullish or bearish bias?
2422
2423 ##11:41 -## Institutional order flow and bullish/bearish scenarios.
2424
2425 ##19:03 -## Looking at the weekly opening price and the midnight opening price.
2426
2427 ##25:07 -## How do you know your daily bias is going to be?
2428
2429 == {{id name="115"/}}115 - Intraday Top Down Analysis ==
2430
2431 ##00:11 -## Short-term top-down analysis.
2432
2433 ##04:08 -## What are the intraday charts for this week?
2434
2435 ##08:34 -## Central Bank Dealers Range Deviations -.
2436
2437 ##12:21 -## Daily range projections for flout.
2438
2439 ##20:58 -## You can’t go wrong with taking profits.
2440
2441 ##26:17 -## My personal favorite ict bullish patterns.
2442
2443 ##31:32 -## Patience pays because you know what you’re looking for.
2444
2445 ##37:11 -## If I don’t see price doing these three things, I don't do anything.
2446
2447 ##45:32 -## What is the optimal trade entry near where the breaker is?
2448
2449 ##51:43 -## The gold market as a four hour chart.
2450
2451 ##57:09 -## The fair value gap is here.