1 | 00:00:11 --> 00:00:16 | ICT: Hello folks, Long time, no see, all right, so we're going to look at |
2 | 00:00:17 --> 00:00:25 | Bitcoin, okay, before I get into this as a reminder, I have never traded Bitcoin. |
3 | 00:00:26 --> 00:00:32 | Never traded Bitcoin outside of, you know, the paper trading venues that you |
4 | 00:00:32 --> 00:00:39 | see here on trading view. I practice and dabble in it because there's a lot of |
5 | 00:00:39 --> 00:00:43 | interest in it with my students, and I promise I won't give you a real long, |
6 | 00:00:43 --> 00:00:49 | boring monolog, but I just want to preface it by saying that the times that |
7 | 00:00:49 --> 00:00:57 | I do come out and make public calls with crypto, it takes a lot of time to scroll |
8 | 00:00:57 --> 00:01:02 | back through my Community tab on my YouTube channel, but I've made some |
9 | 00:01:02 --> 00:01:08 | pretty significant calls on crypto. I have been wrong a few times. I'm not say |
10 | 00:01:08 --> 00:01:15 | few. It's like maybe four. I know it's less than five times I was wrong. But |
11 | 00:01:15 --> 00:01:20 | the major, significant price moves, the big crash before it got to 20,000 I |
12 | 00:01:20 --> 00:01:27 | called that 6000 and then I called six to 3000 didn't get quite down to 3000 I |
13 | 00:01:27 --> 00:01:32 | think it was like 3200 don't quote me on that, because I'm not proficient in |
14 | 00:01:32 --> 00:01:37 | crypto. I don't really have all the major significant lows. But ended up |
15 | 00:01:37 --> 00:01:42 | telling everyone that if it ever went to 20,000 I would tell you publicly before |
16 | 00:01:42 --> 00:01:46 | it happened. Before it happened. And I'd said it in 2020 I said we would hit |
17 | 00:01:46 --> 00:01:55 | 20,000 on Bitcoin by Christmas, and then 30,000 by New Year's. And then I called |
18 | 00:01:55 --> 00:02:01 | 50,060 1000, and I couldn't see anything beyond 60,000 well, you can look at |
19 | 00:02:01 --> 00:02:05 | history, and you can look at the community posts, and there you are. It |
20 | 00:02:07 --> 00:02:11 | doesn't mean anything. Okay, I didn't trade it with money, and I know a lot of |
21 | 00:02:11 --> 00:02:21 | you like to count pocket change, but I'm actively investigating, if you will, |
22 | 00:02:21 --> 00:02:27 | these markets the crypto circuit trading them anytime soon, if at all, really, to |
23 | 00:02:27 --> 00:02:32 | be honest with you, but I'm intrigued, because they move around a lot when they |
24 | 00:02:32 --> 00:02:39 | do move, but they act very fickle most of the time. And because of that, I am |
25 | 00:02:39 --> 00:02:46 | not sold on the idea of putting money into an account to trade them. Okay? So |
26 | 00:02:46 --> 00:02:50 | with all that said, just know that I'm not trying to come out and be your |
27 | 00:02:51 --> 00:02:57 | friendly neighborhood crypto guru. I'm just sharing something I put on my |
28 | 00:02:57 --> 00:03:06 | community tab the other day. Now, when I was looking at Bitcoin, I could sit here |
29 | 00:03:06 --> 00:03:11 | and say, when I was watching price trade up to this level here, I was wanting to |
30 | 00:03:11 --> 00:03:16 | see it go lower, and to say something like that in this video doesn't really |
31 | 00:03:16 --> 00:03:19 | mean anything to anyone. It's going to sound like, Well, anybody can do that, |
32 | 00:03:20 --> 00:03:26 | and I'm trying to avoid those types of straw man arguments. But clearly, anyone |
33 | 00:03:26 --> 00:03:31 | that's been training on my YouTube channel, you can see this high, the low |
34 | 00:03:31 --> 00:03:35 | and the higher high, if it breaks, that comes back up to that. That's what I |
35 | 00:03:35 --> 00:03:39 | teach as my breaker. Okay, so it's this down closed candle, right there. That's |
36 | 00:03:39 --> 00:03:45 | the breaker. It's not this, it's not that low. It's this candle right here. |
37 | 00:03:46 --> 00:03:53 | Okay, so I want to go into the details of what I meant by sharing this chart. I |
38 | 00:03:53 --> 00:04:00 | put the link up in my community tab, and the post is on November 15, 2021 and I |
39 | 00:04:00 --> 00:04:06 | keep telling myself to make a note of putting the time and the date on the |
40 | 00:04:06 --> 00:04:11 | Community tab for whatever reason, it doesn't do that. So YouTube's listening. |
41 | 00:04:11 --> 00:04:15 | That's one thing you can improve on your platform, because I don't remember to do |
42 | 00:04:15 --> 00:04:18 | it. But nonetheless, there's a lot of people out there. They they copy my |
43 | 00:04:18 --> 00:04:24 | posts and they put them other things and share them. They keep a running log of |
44 | 00:04:24 --> 00:04:29 | them, which is great, but if you're just trying to use my own community tab to |
45 | 00:04:29 --> 00:04:32 | keep track of what I'm saying when I'm saying it, you're gonna have to rely on |
46 | 00:04:32 --> 00:04:37 | the chart itself. And it's good because it gives you the time up here and the |
47 | 00:04:37 --> 00:04:43 | date. So this was done at that time, and it's on trading view. It's not |
48 | 00:04:43 --> 00:04:49 | manipulated, it's not photoshopped, it's not augmented in any kind of way. The |
49 | 00:04:49 --> 00:04:53 | link takes you right into trading view, okay? And I had this little icon down |
50 | 00:04:53 --> 00:04:59 | here, that eyeball. And if you're new to me when I used to teach on Twitter, |
51 | 00:04:59 --> 00:05:04 | which I'm not on. Twitter anymore. I am not on Facebook anymore. I don't have |
52 | 00:05:04 --> 00:05:08 | any social media accounts. So if you see anybody out there claiming to be me or |
53 | 00:05:08 --> 00:05:13 | running an organization on my mentorship, it's not it's not me. Okay? |
54 | 00:05:13 --> 00:05:18 | I don't do that. I only operate on my own personal form and mentorship. This |
55 | 00:05:18 --> 00:05:25 | YouTube channel and I have a telegram channel, which I very rarely even use, |
56 | 00:05:25 --> 00:05:32 | but I promise to use it a lot in 2022 so the eyeball icon, I use that as a way of |
57 | 00:05:32 --> 00:05:37 | teaching you visually where your focus as my student, should be on any |
58 | 00:05:37 --> 00:05:42 | particular market. So basically, what I'm saying is, when I shared this chart, |
59 | 00:05:42 --> 00:05:50 | when it was trading right here, without saying it, without saying, Go short, |
60 | 00:05:50 --> 00:05:55 | which I'm not licensed to do, without saying, Get into a trade, which is |
61 | 00:05:55 --> 00:06:00 | something I'm not licensed to do. I want you as my student is learning my |
62 | 00:06:00 --> 00:06:11 | concepts to, I guess, study it long enough to see if it does go down into |
63 | 00:06:11 --> 00:06:17 | this level here. Now why would I assume that this level would be important? I'm |
64 | 00:06:17 --> 00:06:27 | going to cover that and why right from here it should drop. So here is a more |
65 | 00:06:27 --> 00:06:31 | recent daily chart. At the time of this recording, I just grabbed some |
66 | 00:06:32 --> 00:06:37 | screenshots and throw them in a PowerPoint, and I want you to take a |
67 | 00:06:37 --> 00:06:45 | look at what has happened since April of 2021, we had this high here. Mark came |
68 | 00:06:45 --> 00:06:52 | down, failed to go lower, rallied, actually, if you go back into my |
69 | 00:06:52 --> 00:06:57 | community tab, also, I mentioned down in here that while it's great, it's been |
70 | 00:06:58 --> 00:07:02 | bearish, and we were expecting some bearishness from in here that it's good |
71 | 00:07:02 --> 00:07:06 | to take your profits in here, and ended up becoming an important low. I didn't |
72 | 00:07:06 --> 00:07:13 | call it higher from there, so that way we're fair. But when price was trading |
73 | 00:07:13 --> 00:07:22 | back above this high here, I had a paper trade loan that I was working with, and |
74 | 00:07:22 --> 00:07:29 | I was basically working with a run from here and here and again, practicing with |
75 | 00:07:29 --> 00:07:34 | this asset class. I don't do a lot of it. I'm not in here every day with it, |
76 | 00:07:34 --> 00:07:38 | but when the daily chart and four hour chart kind of like, Give me something to |
77 | 00:07:38 --> 00:07:43 | work with that I'm used to seeing usually pan out in other markets, then |
78 | 00:07:43 --> 00:07:48 | I'll dabble in it, and I don't make a big deal about it. I don't say, look at |
79 | 00:07:48 --> 00:07:53 | this every day in my mentorship, my students are not bombarded with things |
80 | 00:07:53 --> 00:07:59 | that are crypto I, in fact, I I loathe this because it doesn't give me the |
81 | 00:07:59 --> 00:08:02 | things I'm used to seeing in the markets that I enjoy, which is futures and four |
82 | 00:08:02 --> 00:08:12 | and forex. So if I were to trade every single day and try to engage this market |
83 | 00:08:12 --> 00:08:19 | like I do with Forex, okay, or index futures or the equivalent, I would have |
84 | 00:08:19 --> 00:08:26 | a lot of losses, because the things that I'm looking for in futures and forex, |
85 | 00:08:27 --> 00:08:34 | they don't exist to the same degree and efficiency in this asset class. Now I'm |
86 | 00:08:34 --> 00:08:39 | not saying that it won't do it in the future. That's what I'm intrigued about. |
87 | 00:08:39 --> 00:08:45 | Like I want to see is it growing towards that level of efficiency? If it does, |
88 | 00:08:46 --> 00:08:51 | then I will absolutely be going into this asset class and be very vocal about |
89 | 00:08:51 --> 00:08:57 | it. But for those enthusiasts that have always tried to convert me into a crypto |
90 | 00:08:57 --> 00:09:02 | trader, I do dabble in it, and once in a while, when I see something I'm very |
91 | 00:09:02 --> 00:09:10 | confident about, I'll make my views public. I do not have 90% strike rate in |
92 | 00:09:10 --> 00:09:16 | this in my case studies, and when I'm practicing the times that I do show, |
93 | 00:09:17 --> 00:09:21 | they're pretty consistent, and it's because I'm looking at things that would |
94 | 00:09:21 --> 00:09:26 | otherwise line up with sound logic, with price action. I want to cover that now. |
95 | 00:09:26 --> 00:09:30 | So we had this high here in April, and we traded back above. And you saw me |
96 | 00:09:30 --> 00:09:35 | exit a trade, and I said, sometimes crypto does. We're not expecting it to, |
97 | 00:09:35 --> 00:09:41 | like in forex or futures, and then it collapsed trade back down to an order |
98 | 00:09:41 --> 00:09:46 | block here, rally a little bit consolidated and then sent it one more |
99 | 00:09:46 --> 00:09:51 | time higher than that high. Now think about what's happening here. We have an |
100 | 00:09:51 --> 00:09:52 | old high |
101 | 00:09:53 --> 00:09:59 | over six months ago, so that's an important high, lot to decline from |
102 | 00:09:59 --> 00:10:04 | there. And liquidity was tagged here, and it broke down, and then one more |
103 | 00:10:04 --> 00:10:11 | time, sent it higher. This is classic, classic, classic price action. Anyone |
104 | 00:10:11 --> 00:10:16 | that was selling short here, they get removed. They're no longer in the game. |
105 | 00:10:17 --> 00:10:21 | When you have a old high taken out like this, and it drops down. That is called |
106 | 00:10:21 --> 00:10:25 | priming. And what that does is it gets traders thinking that the market's |
107 | 00:10:25 --> 00:10:32 | created a long term high or a altogether reversal, and lots of interest starts to |
108 | 00:10:32 --> 00:10:36 | pour into that marketplace. Retail will be selling it down here in these lows |
109 | 00:10:36 --> 00:10:41 | and place stop losses up here, if they place a stop loss at all, the market |
110 | 00:10:41 --> 00:10:46 | runs higher, taking those traders out, but that run right there, is |
111 | 00:10:47 --> 00:10:53 | engineering, the perfect opportunity for shorts or bears to come in at a really |
112 | 00:10:53 --> 00:10:59 | good price, above an old high. Now, I know some of you expect to see this |
113 | 00:11:00 --> 00:11:07 | Bitcoin and such go to 100,000 this year or in the soon to come in months. I'm |
114 | 00:11:07 --> 00:11:12 | not of that opinion right now. Okay, I don't, I don't see that now. It's |
115 | 00:11:12 --> 00:11:19 | because I don't have any experience with it, and we're at all time highs. I think |
116 | 00:11:19 --> 00:11:22 | it's just wishful thinking. You know, some people out there say it's going to |
117 | 00:11:22 --> 00:11:25 | go to a million. To a million. Who knows? I don't know. I'm not claiming to |
118 | 00:11:25 --> 00:11:28 | know that. I'm just being honest and saying I don't personally subscribe to |
119 | 00:11:28 --> 00:11:35 | that now, because it took out this high here and it broke down back below this |
120 | 00:11:35 --> 00:11:43 | old high here, this little bit of a rally in there that return up in above |
121 | 00:11:43 --> 00:11:49 | the old high. I expect to see that as a failure. And with this high here we're |
122 | 00:11:49 --> 00:11:55 | going to go into the lower time frame hourly chart. And here we have again, |
123 | 00:11:55 --> 00:12:01 | high, low, higher, high, and this is the hourly chart, but it's a little bit |
124 | 00:12:01 --> 00:12:07 | more, I guess details added to it, not by much, but the original chart I |
125 | 00:12:07 --> 00:12:10 | shared, which was the first slide in this presentation, didn't have all these |
126 | 00:12:10 --> 00:12:16 | little lipstick markers here, but that is a breaker the down close. Can they'll |
127 | 00:12:16 --> 00:12:20 | extend it out in time, if the market trades back up into it, that should |
128 | 00:12:21 --> 00:12:26 | induce short selling. Short selling comes in the marketplace, and then we |
129 | 00:12:26 --> 00:12:34 | have the same pattern here formed here we have a high, a low, higher, high. So |
130 | 00:12:34 --> 00:12:40 | this is a bearish breaker also. Now I want you to think about what you see |
131 | 00:12:40 --> 00:12:46 | here that wasn't in that original post on my community tab, this low, right |
132 | 00:12:46 --> 00:12:51 | here. So we have a low, another low, and I teach this as a relative equal low, |
133 | 00:12:51 --> 00:12:55 | lots of liquidity in the form of cell stops would be resting below here, which |
134 | 00:12:55 --> 00:13:00 | is what I teach is sell side liquidity. That's going to be a draw on liquidity. |
135 | 00:13:00 --> 00:13:06 | That means, think of it like a magnet. And all of these candles are like paper |
136 | 00:13:06 --> 00:13:10 | clips, and they're just being released and dropped. Where are they going to go |
137 | 00:13:10 --> 00:13:15 | to? Where's the magnet below this level here, I'm anchoring your focus below |
138 | 00:13:15 --> 00:13:20 | these lows, but it's over here, where it trades to basically run right down into |
139 | 00:13:20 --> 00:13:25 | that so much like a paperclip would jump and cling to where the magnet is. The |
140 | 00:13:25 --> 00:13:29 | same phenomenons happen here. So I've teach that principles my students in the |
141 | 00:13:29 --> 00:13:35 | form of a draw on liquidity means price is going to make its way to a specific |
142 | 00:13:35 --> 00:13:42 | level for the purpose of going into these orders that reside over here. So |
143 | 00:13:42 --> 00:13:47 | think about the the framework here. We have a market that created a high here |
144 | 00:13:47 --> 00:13:53 | and broke down. Someone sold short up here, the ideal scenario for them to be |
145 | 00:13:54 --> 00:14:01 | a seller here and get out below here, where there's resting cell stops or an |
146 | 00:14:01 --> 00:14:06 | interest to be a buyer, because it did what, it bounced here. It bounced here. |
147 | 00:14:06 --> 00:14:12 | So retail logic is it's going to do that down here again support, right? So if |
148 | 00:14:12 --> 00:14:16 | that market trades that level, and traders come in thinking with retail |
149 | 00:14:16 --> 00:14:20 | logic, they want to be a buyer, right? So how are they going to protect their |
150 | 00:14:20 --> 00:14:25 | position? They're going to put a stop loss in the form of a cell stop on their |
151 | 00:14:25 --> 00:14:28 | long position. They intend to take when it trades back down these old lows, |
152 | 00:14:28 --> 00:14:35 | because they trust every book out there that says this is support. And when it |
153 | 00:14:35 --> 00:14:40 | trades down there, they enter longs and they put cell stops below these lows |
154 | 00:14:40 --> 00:14:43 | over here, thinking it's going to protect them, and they get wiped out |
155 | 00:14:43 --> 00:14:51 | immediately. So that's the general idea of what I was framing that post on. But |
156 | 00:14:51 --> 00:14:56 | in this area, in here, you can go in even deeper. This candle was the candle |
157 | 00:14:56 --> 00:15:01 | the last one formed when I posted this chart. The. The very first slide in this |
158 | 00:15:01 --> 00:15:05 | presentation, I want you to go into this area, which is this breaker here. We're |
159 | 00:15:05 --> 00:15:10 | gonna look at an optimal trade entry there. So here's a 15 minute time frame |
160 | 00:15:10 --> 00:15:18 | inside that bearish breaker. And we have optimal trade entry there, and we also |
161 | 00:15:18 --> 00:15:24 | have one here, and then we have a bearish order block there, and then we |
162 | 00:15:24 --> 00:15:28 | have that run down into that liquidity. So there's a few other trades in this, |
163 | 00:15:28 --> 00:15:32 | if you're familiar with my concepts on the YouTube channel, and mentorship, but |
164 | 00:15:32 --> 00:15:39 | nonetheless, I gave up extensive lecture to my students in mentorship over the |
165 | 00:15:39 --> 00:15:48 | weekend. The main focus was reminding them that a lot of folks come to me |
166 | 00:15:48 --> 00:15:52 | because they watch my examples, and they see where I get in at and they see where |
167 | 00:15:52 --> 00:15:57 | my stop loss is, and they see how precise those entries and exits are. And |
168 | 00:15:57 --> 00:16:04 | that's the purpose of me doing it is to inspire you and encourage you. But those |
169 | 00:16:04 --> 00:16:09 | entry points and those exit points, if you're a new student, whether under me |
170 | 00:16:09 --> 00:16:15 | or anyone else, your number one goal should be understanding where the market |
171 | 00:16:15 --> 00:16:19 | should be going to Okay, which is what I teach, is withdrawal and liquidity. So |
172 | 00:16:19 --> 00:16:23 | that draw on liquidity is, where's the market going, and why should it get |
173 | 00:16:23 --> 00:16:31 | there? Those are the two questions that every trader should wrestle with every |
174 | 00:16:31 --> 00:16:34 | time they sit down in front of their charts. If you can't come to the |
175 | 00:16:34 --> 00:16:39 | conclusion as to why it should do those two things go to a particular level and |
176 | 00:16:39 --> 00:16:43 | why it should get there. And what do I mean by that? What I just explained in |
177 | 00:16:43 --> 00:16:48 | terms of who's in control of marketplace right now and who's profiting, where |
178 | 00:16:48 --> 00:16:53 | would the ideal exit point be? Okay, so where is it going? Where's it likely |
179 | 00:16:53 --> 00:17:01 | reaching for an old low, old high, and what directional bias, does that |
180 | 00:17:01 --> 00:17:06 | support? So by having those two questions answered, it gives you a |
181 | 00:17:07 --> 00:17:12 | framework in which to work with a bias. I'm not trying to go long in something |
182 | 00:17:12 --> 00:17:17 | like this. I would never try to buy this market, because the underpinnings and |
183 | 00:17:17 --> 00:17:22 | the existing market structure at that time here was exceedingly bearish. So if |
184 | 00:17:22 --> 00:17:28 | it's bearish, I filter out any idea of looking for a long and I focus primarily |
185 | 00:17:28 --> 00:17:34 | on what would constitute a low risk cell using optimal trade entry and bearish |
186 | 00:17:34 --> 00:17:38 | order blocks, which is taught freely on this YouTube channel. There's the setups |
187 | 00:17:38 --> 00:17:45 | in here that would have offered that. But if you go into training and studying |
188 | 00:17:45 --> 00:17:50 | my YouTube channel and you're just trying to find the entry techniques, |
189 | 00:17:50 --> 00:17:53 | because it seems like that's the secret, that's the secret sauce, is where to get |
190 | 00:17:53 --> 00:17:58 | in with ultra small stops, and that's the precision. That's the precision |
191 | 00:17:58 --> 00:18:02 | this. You don't need to have precision if you understand the element of the |
192 | 00:18:02 --> 00:18:08 | draw on liquidity, because it gives you multiple points of entry, and you need |
193 | 00:18:08 --> 00:18:15 | to disconnect yourself from trying to have the maximum profit with the least |
194 | 00:18:15 --> 00:18:18 | amount of risk in the beginning, and where it feels counterintuitive in the |
195 | 00:18:18 --> 00:18:21 | beginning, because that's what you think you're going To be learning as a trader, |
196 | 00:18:21 --> 00:18:29 | not just playing a student of my content, but anyone they like the idea |
197 | 00:18:29 --> 00:18:34 | of getting in with a little bit and coming out with a lot and not having any |
198 | 00:18:34 --> 00:18:41 | adverse drawdown. And that's unrealistic as a trader when you first start. So the |
199 | 00:18:41 --> 00:18:45 | way I teach my students to overcome that and to focus on what is the most |
200 | 00:18:45 --> 00:18:52 | significant and salient point at the very beginning of their career and |
201 | 00:18:52 --> 00:18:57 | development is to understand where that market is likely to go in a higher time |
202 | 00:18:57 --> 00:19:03 | frame. So if a higher Time Frame drawing liquidity is easily seen and framed out. |
203 | 00:19:03 --> 00:19:12 | Well, let's take it back up to that original slide here, if it's trading |
204 | 00:19:12 --> 00:19:18 | here, the backdrop behind all that is we already have market trading off of what |
205 | 00:19:18 --> 00:19:21 | I teach is something there, which is a breaker over here, and we already had |
206 | 00:19:21 --> 00:19:27 | stops ran here, and we had stops ran here, and then one more time here. So |
207 | 00:19:27 --> 00:19:34 | it's primed to go lower. It's already taken several stages of buy stops out of |
208 | 00:19:34 --> 00:19:39 | the marketplace. So where does the market likely go to after it takes buy |
209 | 00:19:39 --> 00:19:45 | stops, sell stops, where they reside. Well, we're here now, so we've taken out |
210 | 00:19:45 --> 00:19:52 | that low. So you have to now think of that low, that low and below the lows |
211 | 00:19:52 --> 00:19:52 | over here. |
212 | 00:19:54 --> 00:20:00 | But because it's on a higher time frame, and this is the largest run up you. This |
213 | 00:20:00 --> 00:20:04 | is where the largest pool of liquidity for sell stops resides. So it's the |
214 | 00:20:04 --> 00:20:10 | honey pot, basically, of the smart money that entered here, if we're to assume |
215 | 00:20:10 --> 00:20:14 | that is the case, if they sold short here, if the things I teach are in |
216 | 00:20:15 --> 00:20:20 | operation in these asset classes, or crypto specifically, then it should go |
217 | 00:20:20 --> 00:20:27 | right down there, and then you see that does so handsomely. So I don't want to |
218 | 00:20:27 --> 00:20:30 | give you too much more than what I've already given you here. It may be an |
219 | 00:20:30 --> 00:20:34 | oversimplification for some of you. Oh, I knew that. You know, that's great. |
220 | 00:20:34 --> 00:20:38 | That means you've learned and you're developing. But a lot of you have just |
221 | 00:20:38 --> 00:20:41 | recently found the channel, and maybe this is the first time you were |
222 | 00:20:41 --> 00:20:48 | introduced this idea. But if you were in a seminar held by me, and it will be the |
223 | 00:20:48 --> 00:20:53 | very first day, the first thing I'm going to teach or talk on is this topic, |
224 | 00:20:53 --> 00:20:56 | because this is paramount in the beginning, because everything else is |
225 | 00:20:56 --> 00:21:02 | just going to get you in trouble. How much leverage to use? How big of a stop |
226 | 00:21:02 --> 00:21:06 | loss? Where to put a stop loss? Where to get in at? Those are the questions that |
227 | 00:21:06 --> 00:21:10 | every single trader wants to know right when they first start learning how to |
228 | 00:21:10 --> 00:21:15 | trade, because why they're in a hurry to go lose money. That's what they're in a |
229 | 00:21:15 --> 00:21:17 | hurry to do. They don't think they're gonna lose any money. They think they're |
230 | 00:21:17 --> 00:21:23 | gonna win the lottery. But I tried to be responsible as the mentor and prevent |
231 | 00:21:23 --> 00:21:28 | that from happening, and also give them every advantage to learning, which is |
232 | 00:21:28 --> 00:21:31 | putting them in the right mindset, looking for the things that are most |
233 | 00:21:31 --> 00:21:37 | important, which is, where is the market going and why should it get there? What |
234 | 00:21:37 --> 00:21:41 | that does is it unlocks bias, takes your attention to one side or the other in |
235 | 00:21:41 --> 00:21:46 | terms of, are you going to be a buyer or a seller? Are you a bull or a bear? If |
236 | 00:21:46 --> 00:21:51 | you are bearish on the marketplace, it gives you context to look at the |
237 | 00:21:51 --> 00:21:57 | marketplace with, okay, overnight, there should be a high forming between two |
238 | 00:21:57 --> 00:22:02 | o'clock and four o'clock in the morning. That's your london session. And if it's |
239 | 00:22:02 --> 00:22:06 | bearish, maybe New York will create a continuation after a small retracement, |
240 | 00:22:07 --> 00:22:11 | post 7am New York time. Okay, and reverse that. If you're bullish, if |
241 | 00:22:11 --> 00:22:15 | you're bullish, you're expecting a low to form on the daily range between two |
242 | 00:22:15 --> 00:22:19 | o'clock and four o'clock in the morning during the London session. And after a |
243 | 00:22:19 --> 00:22:25 | retracement, you know, lower after seven o'clock in the morning. That may give |
244 | 00:22:25 --> 00:22:32 | you a New York session continuation while being bullish. So the question of |
245 | 00:22:32 --> 00:22:37 | bias, when do I, you know, hold a bias that's bullish? When do I hold a bearish |
246 | 00:22:37 --> 00:22:41 | bias? That is answered by looking at higher Time Frame charts and |
247 | 00:22:41 --> 00:22:47 | understanding where it should be drawing to, but also keeping in mind that even |
248 | 00:22:47 --> 00:22:50 | though you may have a bearish or bullish bias, doesn't necessarily mean that |
249 | 00:22:50 --> 00:22:53 | every single daily candle is going to be an up candle, because your book, your |
250 | 00:22:53 --> 00:22:58 | bias is bullish. That's that doesn't work either. So there's a lot of things |
251 | 00:22:58 --> 00:23:00 | that go along with building any understanding of daily bias and |
252 | 00:23:00 --> 00:23:07 | understanding what you should be doing as a buyer or seller, but it isn't going |
253 | 00:23:07 --> 00:23:11 | to ever be answered until you understand this theory, which is, where is the |
254 | 00:23:11 --> 00:23:15 | market likely to go, and why should it get there? When I say, why should it get |
255 | 00:23:15 --> 00:23:20 | there? That's underlying narrative. Narrative would be smart money sold up |
256 | 00:23:20 --> 00:23:25 | here. Stops were taken. It moved quickly away. This is a breaker traded up there, |
257 | 00:23:25 --> 00:23:29 | and then it started breaking down aggressively. So it's giving you |
258 | 00:23:29 --> 00:23:36 | confirmation that sellers are on the profitable side. So where do they stand |
259 | 00:23:36 --> 00:23:40 | to make the most money? The honey pot exit would be down here. That's Candy |
260 | 00:23:40 --> 00:23:43 | Land. That's Candy Land. That's where, that's where they want to get to, and |
261 | 00:23:43 --> 00:23:47 | they got to submit to holding on to they're short until we get down in |
262 | 00:23:47 --> 00:23:51 | there, because once the market trades there, that activates every single one |
263 | 00:23:51 --> 00:23:55 | of the sell stops that reside here or will be implemented when the market |
264 | 00:23:55 --> 00:23:59 | trades here, and Support Resistance traders come in, and they add more |
265 | 00:23:59 --> 00:24:06 | liquidity underneath these lows. So that sell side liquidity in the form of a |
266 | 00:24:06 --> 00:24:13 | pool of cell stops, is the perfect counter party to buyers that want to buy |
267 | 00:24:13 --> 00:24:16 | back their short that they sold up here because they entered up here, so they |
268 | 00:24:16 --> 00:24:20 | sold short. How do you get out of short? You have to buy it back. What's the best |
269 | 00:24:20 --> 00:24:24 | scenario to buy it below old lows, and there's willing sellers down here |
270 | 00:24:24 --> 00:24:29 | waiting, and then the market trades aggressively and quickly down into that |
271 | 00:24:29 --> 00:24:35 | area of liquidity. So I covered basics and introduction to understanding how to |
272 | 00:24:36 --> 00:24:41 | build a bias model, how to be a buyer seller, and know how to operate in that, |
273 | 00:24:42 --> 00:24:46 | and focus on where the drawing liquidity is, because that's going to help you do |
274 | 00:24:46 --> 00:24:50 | that, and then understand the narrative, okay? And I understand that. That |
275 | 00:24:50 --> 00:24:56 | probably didn't do it for all of you, but when you look at old data and price |
276 | 00:24:56 --> 00:25:00 | moves, and you do your back testing, it's important for you to go in. And try |
277 | 00:25:00 --> 00:25:04 | to work out narratives that would have been underway. You may not have |
278 | 00:25:04 --> 00:25:09 | understood it or expected it at the time, but use the benefit of hindsight, |
279 | 00:25:09 --> 00:25:13 | because that's how I learned. You know, I practiced and practiced and studied |
280 | 00:25:13 --> 00:25:20 | old moves. And because of repetition and seeing it so many times, you'll see |
281 | 00:25:20 --> 00:25:25 | these things form live, and it's, oh, I expect this, and I expect that, and you |
282 | 00:25:25 --> 00:25:29 | won't be perfect. I'm not perfect, but you'll see that. You'll grow in your |
283 | 00:25:29 --> 00:25:33 | understanding and your prognostication will improve over time, and you can't |
284 | 00:25:33 --> 00:25:37 | rush that either. So hopefully you found this one insightful. Until I'll talk to |
285 | 00:25:37 --> 00:25:39 | you next time. Be safe. You. |