
Learn a complete trading strategy with exact indicators, how to combine them, and effective stop loss and exit positioning, with adjustments, risk management, psychology, and the path to profit.
Learn a simple, two-indicator trading strategy that uses daily candlesticks for entry, stop-loss, and take-profit, with options for aggressive exits and asset-specific settings to pursue longer-term trades.
Identify trading assets across stocks, indices, commodities, currencies, etfs, and crypto, including bitcoin, and learn how this strategy positions you to trade these assets when market interest rises.
Learn to use charting platforms to visualize price and history, compare free and paid tools like Trading View and Metal Trader four, and connect charting with broker execution.
Learn to download, install, and use MetaTrader 4, explore symbols across forex, metals, indices, and commodities, and apply a 20-period moving average on charts.
Learn how to use trading view for charting, including free and paid options, cross-device syncing, and essential features like moving average indicators and backtesting with the replay bar.
Execute trades by performing chart analysis, register for a broker demo, and install MetaTrader 4. Learn to place orders, set stop loss, take profit, and manage leverage.
Develop consistency by following a clear trading rule set, including entry, stop loss, big profit, and risk management, backed by backtesting to ensure long-term profitability.
Learn how the reticular activating system filters trading data to sharpen focus on entry signals and stop-loss placement. Daily practice trains this system for consistency in trading.
Explore information bias as a cognitive bias that leads people to seek unnecessary data or stall action, and recognize the bias blind spot and egocentric bias in trading decisions.
Position your stop loss immediately after a buy signal, placing it just below the candle low with a small gap, adjusted for each market to protect capital.
Learn a profit-taking rule for a complete trading strategy: set a stop loss on a buy signal, then exit when the blue line crosses the green line downward.
Learn to use moving averages and candlestick signals to time buys and sells in indices and ETFs, set stops, capture profits, and backtest strategies for bullish markets.
Explore which assets suit this strategy—primarily stock indices like the s&p 500, dow jones, and nasdaq 100—with careful backtesting, moving averages, and risk-managed stop-loss rules.
Understand why price gaps occur in indices like the S&P 500, how market makers set overnight opening prices, and how brokers and futures contracts influence gaps and slippage.
Explore how the benefit of hindsight informs backtesting and evaluating a trading strategy, including moving averages, entry and exit rules, and the need for patience in day trading.
Identify the confirmation bias and its impact on trading, showing how traders seek supportive information, ignore contrary data, and let beliefs distort risk and trading decisions.
Journal every trade with a technical record, noting entry and stop-loss. Capture take-profit, exit details, and screenshots for weekly review and rules.
Explore a stop-loss reducing alternative within the standard strategy, using backtesting to set a stop below the candle’s middle and the moving average, with retracement-based risk-reward.
Explore take profit alternatives using the Rex indicator and Williams percent R with a shorter period for aggressive exits on a cross below the dotted line after a buy signal.
Backtest the S&P 500 from 2019 using the Rex indicator and moving-average stop-loss rules, collect data, evaluate buy signals, and track profits and mitigated losses.
Backtest a new stop-loss rule by placing it in the middle of the candle body using a 50% retracement tool, and compare results to the current version.
Backtest the sp500 with a modified stop-loss, compare results to the standard approach, and extract data from Excel to measure risk-reward and observe stop-loss impacts.
Backtest a different index using buy signals and a moving average, compare Rexy and Williams percent R exit indicators, and track stop-loss performance in Excel.
Analyze chart data for the indicator and Williams Percenter using basic Excel calculations to compare risk-to-reward and trade duration across scenarios.
Review entry rules using a 20-period moving average and a cross above after the candle closes, define stop-loss and take-profit with the Wrex indicator, and cover backtesting and journaling.
Hi
I don’t teach get rich quick schemes or making $1,000,000 in one year
This is a very simple strategy, it has a high potential of profitability when used correctly and also it depends on the assets that you will use.
We are gonna be very careful how we choose the assets that we trade because assets move differently from each other so the strategy will have different settings for some of those assets as you will see. Serious testing will decide that.
We are going to use two indicators at a time and I will show you an extra indicator for more aggressive exits. We are also going to look at the shape of some candlesticks but we don’t do candlestick analysis.
We will only use the daily candlesticks for entry, stop loss and profit taking so you can imagine that the trades will take several days to complete and sometimes even one week Or a little more. The more it takes the better because this means bigger profits and we are going to recycle the risk on other assets as you will see in a specific video
The daily timeframe has higher probability than any other timeframe and can be very profitable if used correctly because is the main timeframe that bankers and institutional traders use.
I do not teach support and resistance, trendlines, price patterns or candlestick analysis. Many years ago I have been testing those and didn’t found too much there. Also I know that serious institutional traders, hedge funds and quants do not use those techniques. They concentrate on what moves price and build their strategies from there.
What I teach in this course is not everything I know about trading. I also do intraday trading, that means I open and close trades in the same day. But that’s another type of strategy and if I find the time and I see interest I will probably make another course with a intraday type of strategy. But I do not teach that in this course.