Last modified by Drunk Monkey on 2023-01-14 05:38

From version 1.2
edited by Drunk Monkey
on 2020-06-27 18:50
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 10.1
edited by Drunk Monkey
on 2020-06-28 19:38
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

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1 +{{box cssClass="box floatinginfobox" title="**Quick Links**"}}
2 +{{toc start="2"/}}
3 +{{/box}}
4 +
1 1  == Optimal Trade Entry Primer ==
2 2  
7 +* one of many trading patterns, one of the easiest
8 +* trading plan needs to be simple:
9 +** what's your risk model
10 +** how to frame that?
11 +** what makes your entry
12 +** what gives you indicators of bullish/bearish market?
13 +** how do you execute the trade?
14 +** how do you manage the trade?
15 +** where do you take profits?
16 +* what make the market predisposed to go higher or lower?
17 +** look at HTF (M, W, D, 4h) and look for key levels where price has moved away from in the past
18 +** HTF shows where the big players are most likely going to push things around.
19 +** LTF is too noisy to show this detail.
20 +* Assuming bullish market, we are looking for where the market wants to trade higher.  OTE is based on buying during the retracements that occur before the further push upwards.
21 +* The impulse move has to incorporate a break in Market Structure.
22 +* Using Fib Retracement as a visual guide, set the following levels
23 +** -1 - Symmetrical Price Swing
24 +** -0.62 - TP2
25 +** -0.27 - TP1
26 +** 0 - First Profit - Scaling
27 +** 0.5 - Equilibrium
28 +** 0.618 - 62% retracement
29 +** 0.705 - OTE 70.5%
30 +** 0.79 - 79%
31 +** 1 - 100%, or likely SL
32 +* OTE (70.5%) is an ideal target.  getting deeper is better, but you run the risk of not filling your order.  62% retracement is also acceptable, but it results in smaller profits because our SL range will be larger, necessitating smaller order sizes to maintain our risk profile.
33 +* First Scaling, or slightly before, represents the place to take initial profits.  It should be a decent return, preferable better than 1:2 risk/reward, but slightly less than 2 (1.5? 1x75?) is also acceptable.
34 +* Setups on 1h charts better than 5m charts because the pip movements will be larger.
35 +* Key levels xxx.00, xxx.20, xxx.50, xxx.80, yyy.00
36 +* Place the fibs on the body of the candles
37 +* Market structure - example given:
38 +- monthly view
39 +[[image:Screenshot 2020-06-29 at 03.11.56.png]]
40 +\\- daily view
41 +[[image:Screenshot 2020-06-29 at 03.14.02.png]]
42 +\\- 15m view[[image:Screenshot 2020-06-29 at 03.06.46.png]]
43 +* Note the following:
44 +** institutional levels
45 +** old monthly high at 1.1720 (1.17137 rounded)
46 +** price runs down until it hits the 20 level (1.1720), rallies and creates a new short term high (old - middle red line, new STH, top red line. It's also called a "market structure break"
47 +** the new STH makes for a more likely trade opportunity. (market maker model) and opens up the chance for an OTE.
48 +** also, a high, with two lower highs on either side makes that high more significant.  when this high is broken, it's a more convincing move than breaking the other shorter term highs, thus giving us the opportunity to find a likely OTE.
49 +** at the fib, we see price rockets away from a STL
50 +* when old highs/lows are broken, trades will tend to reach back to those old positions (retail calls it "support")
3 3  
4 -
52 +== Introduction ==
53 +
54 +* sdfg
55 +
56 +== Example 1 ==
57 +
58 +* example
59 +
60 +== Example 2 ==
61 +
62 +* example
63 +
64 +== Example 3 ==
65 +
66 +* example
67 +
68 +== Example 4 ==
69 +
70 +* example
71 +
72 +== Example 5 ==
73 +
74 +* example
75 +
76 +== Example 6 ==
77 +
78 +* example
79 +
80 +== Example 7 ==
81 +
82 +* example
83 +
84 +== Example 8 ==
85 +
86 +* example
87 +
88 +== Example 9 ==
89 +
90 +* example
91 +
92 +== Example 10 ==
93 +
94 +* example
95 +
96 +== Example 11 ==
97 +
98 +* example
99 +
100 +== Example 12 ==
101 +
102 +* example
103 +
104 +== Example 13 ==
105 +
106 +* example
107 +
108 +== Example 14 ==
109 +
110 +* example
111 +
112 +== Example 15 ==
113 +
114 +* example
115 +
116 +== Example 16 ==
117 +
118 +* example
119 +
120 +== Example 17 ==
121 +
122 +* example
123 +
124 +== Example 18 ==
125 +
126 +* example
127 +
128 +== Example 19 ==
129 +
130 +* example
131 +
132 +== Example 20 ==
133 +
134 +* example
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