Wiki source code of OTE Pattern Recognition Series - Vol 15.srt
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1 | 1 | ||
2 | 00:00:10,860 ~-~-> 00:00:13,830 | ||
3 | ICT: Okay, folks, welcome back. This is volume 15, and a | ||
4 | |||
5 | 2 | ||
6 | 00:00:13,830 ~-~-> 00:00:17,130 | ||
7 | continuing series of 20 videos for the optimal trade entry | ||
8 | |||
9 | 3 | ||
10 | 00:00:17,130 ~-~-> 00:00:19,770 | ||
11 | pattern recognition series for the inner circle trader | ||
12 | |||
13 | 4 | ||
14 | 00:00:19,770 ~-~-> 00:00:23,370 | ||
15 | YouTube channel. Alright, so our example today is going to | ||
16 | |||
17 | 5 | ||
18 | 00:00:23,370 ~-~-> 00:00:27,390 | ||
19 | be in the Australian versus the US dollar. And we have our | ||
20 | |||
21 | 6 | ||
22 | 00:00:27,390 ~-~-> 00:00:31,890 | ||
23 | charts already trained in the five minute timeframe. And I'm | ||
24 | |||
25 | 7 | ||
26 | 00:00:31,890 ~-~-> 00:00:34,200 | ||
27 | going to ask you to take a look at the chart, study it | ||
28 | |||
29 | 8 | ||
30 | 00:00:34,260 ~-~-> 00:00:36,960 | ||
31 | before I add the annotation. So pause your video now. | ||
32 | |||
33 | 9 | ||
34 | 00:00:42,570 ~-~-> 00:00:46,170 | ||
35 | Okay, I'm gonna add the annotations. Alright, so we can see | ||
36 | |||
37 | 10 | ||
38 | 00:00:46,170 ~-~-> 00:00:52,410 | ||
39 | our standard 830 in the morning to 11am New York Standard | ||
40 | |||
41 | 11 | ||
42 | 00:00:52,410 ~-~-> 00:00:59,550 | ||
43 | Time. Optimal trade entry right in here. This leg comes down | ||
44 | |||
45 | 12 | ||
46 | 00:00:59,550 ~-~-> 00:01:05,670 | ||
47 | exactly. At 8:30am the price leg is here to here and then | ||
48 | |||
49 | 13 | ||
50 | 00:01:05,670 ~-~-> 00:01:10,860 | ||
51 | down. Now there was a smaller retracement that was an | ||
52 | |||
53 | 14 | ||
54 | 00:01:10,860 ~-~-> 00:01:15,870 | ||
55 | absolutely an optimal trade entry. That's not to diminish | ||
56 | |||
57 | 15 | ||
58 | 00:01:15,870 ~-~-> 00:01:19,350 | ||
59 | that as the pattern, but we have to incorporate the elements | ||
60 | |||
61 | 16 | ||
62 | 00:01:19,350 ~-~-> 00:01:22,950 | ||
63 | of the time window. That's here. Okay so you can see on this | ||
64 | |||
65 | 17 | ||
66 | 00:01:22,950 ~-~-> 00:01:28,650 | ||
67 | particular candle 8:30am dead on it trades down your fill | ||
68 | |||
69 | 18 | ||
70 | 00:01:28,650 ~-~-> 00:01:32,190 | ||
71 | would have been on that candle, your fill 62% retracement | ||
72 | |||
73 | 19 | ||
74 | 00:01:32,190 ~-~-> 00:01:37,170 | ||
75 | level keeping with the models minimum rolls. Point 6619 is | ||
76 | |||
77 | 20 | ||
78 | 00:01:37,170 ~-~-> 00:01:40,890 | ||
79 | our entry. There's a four PIP drawdown from your entry and | ||
80 | |||
81 | 21 | ||
82 | 00:01:40,890 ~-~-> 00:01:45,870 | ||
83 | using a 10 PIP stop loss below this low here. We have an old | ||
84 | |||
85 | 22 | ||
86 | 00:01:46,050 ~-~-> 00:01:50,340 | ||
87 | high returning almost 10 pips, they're | ||
88 | |||
89 | 23 | ||
90 | 00:01:52,290 ~-~-> 00:01:52,980 | ||
91 | almost | ||
92 | |||
93 | 24 | ||
94 | 00:01:55,050 ~-~-> 00:01:59,220 | ||
95 | 20 pips and you got one standard deviation offering a | ||
96 | |||
97 | 25 | ||
98 | 00:01:59,220 ~-~-> 00:02:03,930 | ||
99 | handsome Potential reward there. One and a half and finally, | ||
100 | |||
101 | 26 | ||
102 | 00:02:04,290 ~-~-> 00:02:09,840 | ||
103 | taking off at two standard deviations of the optimal trade | ||
104 | |||
105 | 27 | ||
106 | 00:02:09,840 ~-~-> 00:02:14,250 | ||
107 | entry range they're offering 39 pips just in this short | ||
108 | |||
109 | 28 | ||
110 | 00:02:14,250 ~-~-> 00:02:16,890 | ||
111 | little run here you know you have to whether this | ||
112 | |||
113 | 29 | ||
114 | 00:02:16,890 ~-~-> 00:02:20,790 | ||
115 | retracement and then ultimately gets to it there. So you if | ||
116 | |||
117 | 30 | ||
118 | 00:02:20,790 ~-~-> 00:02:23,310 | ||
119 | you use this one using the rules you'd be bailing out of the | ||
120 | |||
121 | 31 | ||
122 | 00:02:23,310 ~-~-> 00:02:26,370 | ||
123 | trade as a hit here, even though you could have taken | ||
124 | |||
125 | 32 | ||
126 | 00:02:26,370 ~-~-> 00:02:29,790 | ||
127 | partials at any one of these. Okay, so here is the secondary | ||
128 | |||
129 | 33 | ||
130 | 00:02:29,820 ~-~-> 00:02:33,660 | ||
131 | entry opportunity. And using this price legs low, the price | ||
132 | |||
133 | 34 | ||
134 | 00:02:33,660 ~-~-> 00:02:37,170 | ||
135 | laying high, the retracement down in your fill would be on | ||
136 | |||
137 | 35 | ||
138 | 00:02:37,170 ~-~-> 00:02:42,930 | ||
139 | this candle here. With the spread and your fill would be a | ||
140 | |||
141 | 36 | ||
142 | 00:02:42,930 ~-~-> 00:02:46,620 | ||
143 | hypothetical point 6639 entry you have only a three PIP | ||
144 | |||
145 | 37 | ||
146 | 00:02:46,620 ~-~-> 00:02:51,900 | ||
147 | drawdown and the run above the relative equal highs. We want | ||
148 | |||
149 | 38 | ||
150 | 00:02:51,900 ~-~-> 00:02:56,550 | ||
151 | to see expansion there and ultimately trades to one half of | ||
152 | |||
153 | 39 | ||
154 | 00:02:56,550 ~-~-> 00:03:01,680 | ||
155 | a standard deviation offering more than 25 pips. And this | ||
156 | |||
157 | 40 | ||
158 | 00:03:01,680 ~-~-> 00:03:07,470 | ||
159 | candle trades exactly to that high of 6667 and five PIP | ||
160 | |||
161 | 41 | ||
162 | 00:03:07,470 ~-~-> 00:03:11,100 | ||
163 | bets, which is right here, and doesn't go any higher than | ||
164 | |||
165 | 42 | ||
166 | 00:03:11,100 ~-~-> 00:03:16,110 | ||
167 | that consolidates and breaks down. This after trading down | ||
168 | |||
169 | 43 | ||
170 | 00:03:16,140 ~-~-> 00:03:18,810 | ||
171 | here would have eventually stopped you out even on the | ||
172 | |||
173 | 44 | ||
174 | 00:03:18,810 ~-~-> 00:03:22,080 | ||
175 | initial entry down here, you would have trailed your stop | ||
176 | |||
177 | 45 | ||
178 | 00:03:22,080 ~-~-> 00:03:25,020 | ||
179 | loss rate below these lows, you would have gotten stopped | ||
180 | |||
181 | 46 | ||
182 | 00:03:25,110 ~-~-> 00:03:29,670 | ||
183 | out at that point. So any partials that would have been left | ||
184 | |||
185 | 47 | ||
186 | 00:03:29,670 ~-~-> 00:03:33,600 | ||
187 | in the marketplace to try to get to the previous day's high, | ||
188 | |||
189 | 48 | ||
190 | 00:03:33,600 ~-~-> 00:03:37,620 | ||
191 | which is over here. That previous day's high coming in at | ||
192 | |||
193 | 49 | ||
194 | 00:03:37,620 ~-~-> 00:03:42,090 | ||
195 | 6680. And two PIP bets is an undelivered target. And I | ||
196 | |||
197 | 50 | ||
198 | 00:03:42,090 ~-~-> 00:03:43,440 | ||
199 | mentioned this in my | ||
200 | |||
201 | 51 | ||
202 | 00:03:43,680 ~-~-> 00:03:48,030 | ||
203 | Twitter dialogue today basically, kind of like pushing and | ||
204 | |||
205 | 52 | ||
206 | 00:03:48,030 ~-~-> 00:03:52,530 | ||
207 | emphasizing what's more important, is it your target being | ||
208 | |||
209 | 53 | ||
210 | 00:03:52,530 ~-~-> 00:03:58,800 | ||
211 | hit or profiting because so many traders in this industry | ||
212 | |||
213 | 54 | ||
214 | 00:03:59,460 ~-~-> 00:04:04,230 | ||
215 | lose Money, and they've had open paper profit. And when I | ||
216 | |||
217 | 55 | ||
218 | 00:04:04,230 ~-~-> 00:04:06,180 | ||
219 | say paper profit, I'm not talking about just demo trading. | ||
220 | |||
221 | 56 | ||
222 | 00:04:06,540 ~-~-> 00:04:09,150 | ||
223 | I'm saying that. How many times have you traded with live | ||
224 | |||
225 | 57 | ||
226 | 00:04:09,150 ~-~-> 00:04:15,630 | ||
227 | funds, and then watched a potential profit completely turn | ||
228 | |||
229 | 58 | ||
230 | 00:04:15,630 ~-~-> 00:04:18,960 | ||
231 | around against you and go into a loss. Now, how many times | ||
232 | |||
233 | 59 | ||
234 | 00:04:18,960 ~-~-> 00:04:21,690 | ||
235 | Could you go back in time, hypothetically, and say if I just | ||
236 | |||
237 | 60 | ||
238 | 00:04:21,690 ~-~-> 00:04:24,870 | ||
239 | would have took something off when it was given me X amount | ||
240 | |||
241 | 61 | ||
242 | 00:04:24,900 ~-~-> 00:04:29,250 | ||
243 | of pips or X amount of dollars for return? And you did that, | ||
244 | |||
245 | 62 | ||
246 | 00:04:29,580 ~-~-> 00:04:33,720 | ||
247 | as a general rule of thumb, you always pay yourself. I made | ||
248 | |||
249 | 63 | ||
250 | 00:04:33,720 ~-~-> 00:04:37,740 | ||
251 | a remark yesterday on Twitter, along the lines that if you | ||
252 | |||
253 | 64 | ||
254 | 00:04:37,740 ~-~-> 00:04:41,370 | ||
255 | worked a partial week at your job, so you you work a normal | ||
256 | |||
257 | 65 | ||
258 | 00:04:41,400 ~-~-> 00:04:45,000 | ||
259 | Monday through Friday, and you worked Monday and Tuesday and | ||
260 | |||
261 | 66 | ||
262 | 00:04:45,000 ~-~-> 00:04:47,310 | ||
263 | became ill and didn't finish the rest of the week. Does your | ||
264 | |||
265 | 67 | ||
266 | 00:04:47,310 ~-~-> 00:04:51,450 | ||
267 | employer get to keep all of those earned income hours that | ||
268 | |||
269 | 68 | ||
270 | 00:04:51,450 ~-~-> 00:04:54,930 | ||
271 | you put in on Monday and Tuesday? Of course not. So when you | ||
272 | |||
273 | 69 | ||
274 | 00:04:54,930 ~-~-> 00:04:58,080 | ||
275 | put on a trade and the market offers you an opportunity to | ||
276 | |||
277 | 70 | ||
278 | 00:04:58,080 ~-~-> 00:05:01,530 | ||
279 | take something off, and scaling You have to do that. | ||
280 | |||
281 | 71 | ||
282 | 00:05:01,680 ~-~-> 00:05:05,430 | ||
283 | Otherwise you fall victim to something like this, where both | ||
284 | |||
285 | 72 | ||
286 | 00:05:05,430 ~-~-> 00:05:08,820 | ||
287 | patterns offered opportunity to book a profit, | ||
288 | |||
289 | 73 | ||
290 | 00:05:09,330 ~-~-> 00:05:14,850 | ||
291 | hypothetically. But if you don't execute those partials that | ||
292 | |||
293 | 74 | ||
294 | 00:05:14,850 ~-~-> 00:05:18,210 | ||
295 | are at logical levels, as we talked about in the fib, again, | ||
296 | |||
297 | 75 | ||
298 | 00:05:18,210 ~-~-> 00:05:21,180 | ||
299 | the fibs, not the magic, it's just logical levels for you to | ||
300 | |||
301 | 76 | ||
302 | 00:05:21,180 ~-~-> 00:05:25,380 | ||
303 | take off something you're not forced to. But this is what | ||
304 | |||
305 | 77 | ||
306 | 00:05:25,410 ~-~-> 00:05:28,290 | ||
307 | will happen. Invariably, if you keep doing this long enough, | ||
308 | |||
309 | 78 | ||
310 | 00:05:28,590 ~-~-> 00:05:30,930 | ||
311 | you're going to have a trade that will look good, it'll | ||
312 | |||
313 | 79 | ||
314 | 00:05:30,930 ~-~-> 00:05:33,000 | ||
315 | look, it'll look good, it'll look strong, it'll look like | ||
316 | |||
317 | 80 | ||
318 | 00:05:33,000 ~-~-> 00:05:35,340 | ||
319 | it's performing. And it may in fact, look like it's going to | ||
320 | |||
321 | 81 | ||
322 | 00:05:35,340 ~-~-> 00:05:39,270 | ||
323 | go and run up above that high, but it Peters out and loses | ||
324 | |||
325 | 82 | ||
326 | 00:05:39,270 ~-~-> 00:05:43,230 | ||
327 | momentum and goes the other direction. So you're either left | ||
328 | |||
329 | 83 | ||
330 | 00:05:43,230 ~-~-> 00:05:48,570 | ||
331 | with being upset and emotional about not taking partials and | ||
332 | |||
333 | 84 | ||
334 | 00:05:48,570 ~-~-> 00:05:52,590 | ||
335 | getting stopped out, or learning from that and saying, okay, | ||
336 | |||
337 | 85 | ||
338 | 00:05:52,950 ~-~-> 00:05:56,640 | ||
339 | I can take something off, and I'm not going to demand my | ||
340 | |||
341 | 86 | ||
342 | 00:05:57,210 ~-~-> 00:06:00,780 | ||
343 | best case scenario, exit or target. I'm going to take | ||
344 | |||
345 | 87 | ||
346 | 00:06:00,780 ~-~-> 00:06:04,860 | ||
347 | something off and there are a plethora of so called | ||
348 | |||
349 | 88 | ||
350 | 00:06:04,860 ~-~-> 00:06:08,940 | ||
351 | educators in this industry that will say partials is stupid | ||
352 | |||
353 | 89 | ||
354 | 00:06:09,240 ~-~-> 00:06:15,690 | ||
355 | partials is dumb partials is a rookie ploy or attempt to | ||
356 | |||
357 | 90 | ||
358 | 00:06:15,690 ~-~-> 00:06:21,600 | ||
359 | just satisfy the fear and greed tug award it's going on. And | ||
360 | |||
361 | 91 | ||
362 | 00:06:22,680 ~-~-> 00:06:28,470 | ||
363 | the last one I agree with, because it rewards your time and | ||
364 | |||
365 | 92 | ||
366 | 00:06:28,470 ~-~-> 00:06:33,990 | ||
367 | risk. And it doesn't matter that you're reducing the amount | ||
368 | |||
369 | 93 | ||
370 | 00:06:34,020 ~-~-> 00:06:37,710 | ||
371 | of potential profit, you're reducing the same thing on a | ||
372 | |||
373 | 94 | ||
374 | 00:06:37,710 ~-~-> 00:06:40,920 | ||
375 | relative basis that you had in terms of risk. You're | ||
376 | |||
377 | 95 | ||
378 | 00:06:40,920 ~-~-> 00:06:44,100 | ||
379 | reducing it as you take something off, you're paying the | ||
380 | |||
381 | 96 | ||
382 | 00:06:44,100 ~-~-> 00:06:48,690 | ||
383 | trader, you're rewarding, your risk, the initial risk, and | ||
384 | |||
385 | 97 | ||
386 | 00:06:48,690 ~-~-> 00:06:52,440 | ||
387 | take taking something out. Remember that workweek analogy. | ||
388 | |||
389 | 98 | ||
390 | 00:06:52,950 ~-~-> 00:06:57,210 | ||
391 | You have to find a way to grow comfortable taking something | ||
392 | |||
393 | 99 | ||
394 | 00:06:57,300 ~-~-> 00:06:59,910 | ||
395 | out of the marketplace when it offers it to you. If you come | ||
396 | |||
397 | 100 | ||
398 | 00:06:59,910 ~-~-> 00:07:02,730 | ||
399 | in As industry, or if you've been unable to find | ||
400 | |||
401 | 101 | ||
402 | 00:07:02,730 ~-~-> 00:07:05,460 | ||
403 | profitability, and you can't warm up to this idea, I | ||
404 | |||
405 | 102 | ||
406 | 00:07:05,460 ~-~-> 00:07:10,830 | ||
407 | guarantee you, if you try it, you'll love it. Because it | ||
408 | |||
409 | 103 | ||
410 | 00:07:10,890 ~-~-> 00:07:13,500 | ||
411 | manages all of that fear and greed, that tug of war that | ||
412 | |||
413 | 104 | ||
414 | 00:07:13,530 ~-~-> 00:07:15,990 | ||
415 | takes place. Once you put the trade on in a live setting, | ||
416 | |||
417 | 105 | ||
418 | 00:07:16,020 ~-~-> 00:07:18,600 | ||
419 | you want to get out of the trade, you wanted to get to your | ||
420 | |||
421 | 106 | ||
422 | 00:07:18,600 ~-~-> 00:07:21,240 | ||
423 | target right away, but you can't force that. But as it | ||
424 | |||
425 | 107 | ||
426 | 00:07:21,300 ~-~-> 00:07:23,910 | ||
427 | logically moves to levels where you could take partial | ||
428 | |||
429 | 108 | ||
430 | 00:07:23,910 ~-~-> 00:07:29,100 | ||
431 | profits and exit some of the position, thus reducing the | ||
432 | |||
433 | 109 | ||
434 | 00:07:29,130 ~-~-> 00:07:32,580 | ||
435 | exposure or risk, but rewarding and adding to your bottom | ||
436 | |||
437 | 110 | ||
438 | 00:07:32,580 ~-~-> 00:07:37,410 | ||
439 | line because these targets are not guaranteed. But guess | ||
440 | |||
441 | 111 | ||
442 | 00:07:37,410 ~-~-> 00:07:41,340 | ||
443 | what? If you're in a market, it's trading here, and you put | ||
444 | |||
445 | 112 | ||
446 | 00:07:41,340 ~-~-> 00:07:45,780 | ||
447 | your market order to get out. That's more likely to fill you | ||
448 | |||
449 | 113 | ||
450 | 00:07:45,780 ~-~-> 00:07:50,370 | ||
451 | in a profit than waiting for that undelivered target. So | ||
452 | |||
453 | 114 | ||
454 | 00:07:50,700 ~-~-> 00:07:54,090 | ||
455 | today, I kind of like pushed the envelope to try to get you | ||
456 | |||
457 | 115 | ||
458 | 00:07:54,090 ~-~-> 00:07:58,650 | ||
459 | thinking about this particular pair on Twitter. And it gave | ||
460 | |||
461 | 116 | ||
462 | 00:07:58,650 ~-~-> 00:08:02,100 | ||
463 | two opportunities both you yielded the potential to pay out | ||
464 | |||
465 | 117 | ||
466 | 00:08:02,130 ~-~-> 00:08:07,290 | ||
467 | but it did not hit the logical level of the previous day's | ||
468 | |||
469 | 118 | ||
470 | 00:08:07,290 ~-~-> 00:08:11,310 | ||
471 | high and it's not necessary to find profitability, getting | ||
472 | |||
473 | 119 | ||
474 | 00:08:11,310 ~-~-> 00:08:14,520 | ||
475 | your best case scenario targets. So if we found this | ||
476 | |||
477 | 120 | ||
478 | 00:08:14,520 ~-~-> 00:08:16,770 | ||
479 | insightful until next time, I wish you good luck and good | ||
480 | |||
481 | 121 | ||
482 | 00:08:16,770 ~-~-> 00:08:17,130 | ||
483 | trading |