
In this lesson, we’ll take the first step into crypto trading by setting up an exchange account. You’ll see how to register on Bybit, understand what KYC (Identity Verification) is, and learn why it’s required.
Don’t worry — we’ll be using a demo account for practice, so there’s no need to trade with real money yet.
In this lesson, we’ll explore the Bybit interface and understand where everything is located. You’ll see how to access Spot trading, Futures trading, and key tools inside the platform.
Don’t worry about understanding every feature yet — this is just to help you feel confident and comfortable before we start practicing.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to activate and use the demo trading feature on Bybit. We’ll explore how the demo account works, how virtual funds are provided, and why practicing with demo trading is essential before risking real money.
By the end of this lesson, you’ll be ready to place practice trades in a safe, risk-free environment.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what stablecoins are and why traders use them. We’ll explain USDT and USDC in simple terms, how they maintain a stable value, and how they are used as the base currency for most crypto trades.
Understanding stablecoins is an important foundation before moving into real trading strategies.
In this lesson, we’ll execute a real spot trade inside the demo account. You’ll see how to place market buy and sell orders, review your wallet balance, and understand how profits and losses are reflected.
This is your first step toward practical trading experience.
In this lesson, we’ll break down the most important order types in trading: market orders, limit orders, and conditional orders. You’ll see how each one works inside the platform and understand how they impact price execution and trading costs.
Mastering order types is a key step toward becoming a disciplined trader.
In this lesson, we introduce the concept of derivatives trading in simple terms. You’ll understand how traders can make money from both rising and falling markets without directly owning the asset.
This foundation will help you confidently move into futures trading, leverage, and position management in the upcoming lessons.
In this lesson, we explain leverage in a clear and beginner-friendly way. You’ll see how a small price movement can result in large gains — or large losses — when leverage is involved.
By the end of this lesson, you’ll understand why leverage is powerful, and why it must be used carefully.
In this lesson, we walk through a real futures long trade from start to finish. You’ll see how to enter the trade, manage risk with take profit and stop loss, and protect profits once the first target is hit.
This hands-on example will help you understand how professional traders manage winning positions.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how short trades work in futures trading. We’ll break down what happens in the background when you open a short position, how profits and losses are calculated, and why traders can make money when prices fall.
By the end of this lesson, you’ll clearly understand the mechanics of short selling before seeing a live trading example in the next video.
In this lesson, we execute a complete short trade step by step using the demo account. You’ll see how to enter a short position, set take profit and stop loss levels, manage partial profits, and adjust risk as the trade moves in your favor.
This practical example will help you confidently apply what you learned about short selling in real trading situations.
In this lesson, you’ll set up TradingView, explore free vs paid plans, install the desktop app, learn what to focus on as a beginner and navigate the first screen with confidence.
Learn how to add and search symbols, use the watchlist, and understand the chart area in TradingView, including price, time, and chart types.
Learn how to change chart time frames, understand candle intervals, time zones, use favorites, and navigate charts across different time periods.
Learn how to add, customize, and manage indicators in TradingView, including VWAP, moving averages, volume, and RSI.
Learn how to use TradingView drawing tools such as trendlines, horizontal levels, channels, and trade planning tools to analyze price charts visually.
Learn how to use TradingView’s Object Tree to group, organize, and manage chart drawings across multiple timeframes and trade ideas.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to read and understand candlesticks from the ground up.
We break down the anatomy of a candlestick — body, wicks, open, close, high, and low — and explain what each part tells you about buyer and seller strength.
You’ll also see real chart examples across different timeframes, so you understand how candlesticks work in live markets.
This lesson is designed for absolute beginners and forms the visual foundation for all price-action trading strategies.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify rejection candles, also known as pin bars, and understand what they reveal about price rejection and market behavior.
We focus on why wicks matter, how to recognize bullish and bearish rejection, and how these candles show failed price attempts in the market.
This lesson is designed for beginners and helps you read price action more clearly — without relying on indicators or pattern-based signals.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify momentum candles and understand what they reveal about market strength and imbalance.
We explore how strong candle bodies, small or missing wicks, and decisive closes show buyer or seller commitment, and how momentum candles often appear during breakouts and strong trends.
This beginner-friendly lesson helps you read price action more clearly and use momentum candles as one of several confirmations, not as standalone signals.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify indecision candles, including doji candles and inside bars, and understand what they reveal about market balance and uncertainty.
We explain how these candles show periods where buyers and sellers are evenly matched, why patience is important during these moments, and how to wait for confirmation before making trading decisions.
This beginner-friendly lesson helps you read price action more clearly and avoid entering trades too early.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify engulfing candles and understand what they reveal about shifts in market control.
We explain how bullish and bearish engulfing candles form, what they indicate about buyer and seller strength, and why engulfing candles should be used as confirmation, not as standalone trading signals.
This beginner-friendly lesson helps you read price action more clearly and prepares you for understanding why location matters in trading.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what displacement candles are and why they matter in price action trading. Using simple chart examples, we’ll see how these strong candles show momentum and control from buyers or sellers, and how they provide valuable context when combined with structure and support and resistance.
In this lesson, you’ll learn the most important rule of candlestick analysis — why candles only matter at the right location on the chart.
We compare the same candlestick patterns forming at different places and explain how support and resistance give meaning to candlestick signals.
This lesson helps beginners avoid common mistakes and builds the foundation for using candlesticks correctly and confidently in real trading.
Support and resistance are core concepts every trader must understand — but they are often misunderstood.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to correctly identify support and resistance using real chart examples. I’ll explain these concepts step by step in simple language, focusing on how price reacts around key levels and why support and resistance should be treated as zones rather than exact lines.
This lesson is suitable for beginners and works across crypto, forex, stocks, and indices. It can be combined with any trading approach, including breakout, retest, trend trading, and VWAP-based strategies.
By the end of this lesson, you’ll be able to confidently draw and use support and resistance levels on any chart.
In this lesson, we apply support and resistance concepts on real charts and learn how to identify key zones using multiple time frames.
The Breakout and Retest strategy is one of the most reliable ways to trade price action — when applied correctly.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify valid breakout levels and why waiting for the retest helps avoid fake breakouts that trap many traders. We’ll focus on using higher-timeframe support and resistance to confirm trades and improve consistency.
This strategy can be applied to crypto, forex, stocks, and indices, and works across multiple timeframes for both day trading and swing trading.
By the end of this lesson, you’ll understand how to trade breakouts with more patience, clarity, and confidence.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how price moves by creating highs and lows — also known as market structure.
We’ll break down the four building blocks of structure:
Higher High
Higher Low
Lower High
Lower Low
By the end of this lesson, you’ll be able to visually identify uptrends and downtrends and understand who is in control of the market — buyers or sellers.
This is a core foundation lesson that everything else in price action builds on.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to visually identify whether the market is trending or ranging using price action alone.
You’ll understand:
How price behaves in a trend
How to recognize a range or consolidation
Why some strategies work in trends but fail in ranges
By the end of this lesson, you’ll be able to quickly decide what type of market you’re trading — before choosing a strategy.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what a market structure break is and why it matters in real trading.
You’ll see how structure breaks appear in:
uptrends
downtrends
ranging markets
This lesson helps you understand when market behavior may be changing — and why structure breaks should be treated as information, not instant trade signals.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to identify swing highs and swing lows on a price chart and understand why price often reacts around these areas. We’ll also introduce the concept of liquidity in simple terms, helping you see where trading opportunities begin to form and why these levels matter in real market conditions.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to properly draw trendlines and channels using TradingView and understand how they should be used in price action trading. We’ll cover how trendlines can act as potential support and resistance, how channels help define normal price movement, and how to avoid common beginner mistakes.
In this lesson, you’ll learn the difference between real breakouts and fakeouts using simple, visual chart examples. We’ll explore why price often fails after breaking a level, why beginners get trapped, and how to read price behavior correctly so you can stop chasing breakouts and wait for higher-quality trade opportunities.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what break and retest means and why it’s one of the safest ways for beginners to trade breakouts. We’ll look at clear chart examples to understand how old resistance becomes new support, how to avoid panic entries, and where simple entry and stop-loss areas are usually placed using price action.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what trend pullbacks are and how they differ from retests after breakouts. Using clear chart examples, we’ll see why pullbacks are a normal part of trending markets, how to avoid FOMO entries, and how to plan simple long and short trades by waiting for price to pull back into key support or resistance zones.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what range trading is and how to trade the market when price is moving sideways. Using clear chart examples, we’ll see how to identify support and resistance in a range, where simple long and short entries are usually taken, and why many breakouts fail inside ranges—helping beginners avoid common trading mistakes.
In this section, we learn how to use a few simple indicators as confluences to support price action trade decisions.
Indicators are never used as standalone signals, but only as additional confirmation.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to use volume as a confluence to support price action trade decisions.
We focus on understanding whether a price move has real market participation behind it, using clear bullish and bearish swing-trade examples on the chart.
Volume is never used as a standalone signal — it simply helps confirm the strength or weakness of a price action setup.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to use the Relative Strength Index (RSI) as a confluence to support price action trade decisions — not as a standalone signal.
We’ll cover how RSI helps identify market momentum, overbought and oversold conditions, and RSI divergences, and then apply these concepts to real bullish and bearish trade examples directly on the TradingView chart.
RSI is used strictly as a supporting tool, while price action remains the primary decision-maker.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to use VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price) as a confluence to support price action–based day trading decisions.
This is a strategy I have personally backtested and used in live market conditions, focusing on market structure, pullbacks, and confirmation, rather than prediction.
You’ll learn:
What VWAP really represents and how it resets each day
How volume affects VWAP and why it’s considered a fair value benchmark
Why VWAP works best as an intraday reference, not a signal
How to trade bullish and bearish VWAP pullback setups on the 5-minute chart
Real examples using support & resistance, candlestick patterns, and VWAP together
When not to trade VWAP, including weekends and high-impact news events
VWAP is used strictly as a supporting tool, while price action remains the primary decision-maker.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how Bull Flags and Bear Flags actually work — and how professional traders use them in real market conditions.
Instead of memorizing shapes, we focus on why these patterns form, what they reveal about market behavior, and how to trade them using price action, structure, and confirmation.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how triangle chart patterns actually work and how professional traders use them in real market conditions.
Instead of memorizing shapes, we focus on market structure, price compression, and confirmation, so you understand why triangles form and how to trade them properly.
We’ll break down all three major triangle patterns step by step:
Symmetrical Triangles — compression and indecision
Ascending Triangles — building bullish pressure
Descending Triangles — building bearish pressure
For each pattern, you’ll learn:
The market psychology behind the pattern
Whether it’s bullish, bearish, or bi-directional
How to identify valid breakouts and avoid fakeouts
How to use volume, RSI, and candlestick confirmation
How to calculate minimum take-profit targets
Where to place stop losses logically
All examples are shown using real TradingView charts, with a clear, rule-based approach that fits naturally into price action trading.
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to trade Head and Shoulders and Inverse Head and Shoulders patterns the right way — using market psychology, confirmation, and structure, not guesswork.
Instead of memorizing shapes, we break down what’s actually happening behind the scenes when these reversal patterns form, and how professional traders wait for confirmation before entering a trade.
You’ll learn:
What Head and Shoulders and Inverse Head and Shoulders patterns really represent
The market psychology behind trend reversals
How to correctly draw the neckline
Why waiting for a breakout and retest matters
How to use volume, RSI, and candlestick confirmation
Where to place entries, stop losses, and minimum take-profit targets
How to manage trades when support or resistance appears early
All examples are shown using real TradingView charts, following the same step-by-step process used by experienced price action traders.
This lesson completes the chart patterns section and prepares you for the next critical topic — risk management, where consistency is truly built.
In this lesson, you’ll learn what buy side and sell side liquidity really means and how to identify them.
In this lesson, you will learn what a Liquidity Sweep (also known as a Stop Raid) is and why it happens in the market.
We break down how institutions use areas above equal highs and below equal lows to trigger retail stop losses before moving price in the real direction. You will see both a bullish and bearish liquidity sweep example using a realistic candle model.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• Where liquidity is located
• Why price sometimes “fake breaks” highs and lows
• How to avoid getting trapped in false breakouts
• What confirmation to wait for after a sweep
This is one of the most important institutional concepts in ICT/SMC trading — and a key step toward thinking like smart money instead of retail traders.
Understand the difference between external and internal liquidity in ICT, and how internal liquidity (like Fair Value Gaps and Order Blocks) helps price continue its move.
In this lesson, you will learn what a Fair Value Gap (FVG) is and why it is an important concept in ICT and Smart Money Concepts (SMC).
We explain how aggressive price movement creates imbalance between three candles and how these gaps often act as areas where price returns before continuing the trend. Using clear bullish and bearish examples, you will see how to identify FVGs on the chart and understand their role in institutional trading.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• What creates a Fair Value Gap
• How to identify bullish and bearish FVGs
• Why price often returns to rebalance imbalance
• How FVG connects with displacement and structure
Fair Value Gaps are one of the core institutional tools used to identify high-probability trading opportunities.
In this lesson, you will learn what a Balance Price Range (BPR) is and how it forms when bullish and bearish Fair Value Gaps overlap.
We explain how opposing imbalances can partially neutralize each other, creating a temporary equilibrium zone in the market. Using a clear chart example, you’ll see how BPR areas often act as reaction or consolidation zones before the next expansion.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• What defines a Balance Price Range
• How opposing Fair Value Gaps create balance
• Why BPR acts as a reaction zone
• How to combine BPR with structure, liquidity, and Order Blocks
Balance Price Range is a powerful refinement tool that helps you identify where the market may pause, react, or prepare for its next directional move.
In this lesson, you will learn what an Order Block is and why it is considered a refined form of supply and demand in ICT and Smart Money Concepts (SMC).
We explain how the last opposite candle before a strong displacement move often represents institutional order placement. Using clear bullish and bearish examples, you’ll see how structure breaks confirm the Order Block and how price frequently returns to these areas before continuing in the original direction.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• What defines a bullish and bearish Order Block
• Why displacement and structure break are important
• How to identify mitigation into an Order Block
• How Order Blocks improve entry precision
Order Blocks are one of the core institutional tools used to identify high-probability reaction zones in the market.
In this lesson, you will learn what a Breaker Block is and how it forms when an Order Block fails after a structure break.
We explain how a valid Order Block can lose its role when price breaks through it with strong displacement, and how that same zone can flip from resistance to support — or support to resistance. Using clear bullish and bearish examples, you’ll see how Breaker Blocks help identify market traps and structural shifts.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• What defines a Breaker Block
• Why structure break is essential
• How role reversal happens
• How to identify high-probability retests
• How Breaker Blocks refine entries
Breaker Blocks are a powerful advanced concept in ICT and Smart Money Concepts (SMC), helping traders recognize failed order flow and institutional reversals.
In this lesson, you will learn the difference between a Break of Structure (BOS) and a Change of Character (CHoCH).
We explain how BOS confirms trend continuation, while CHoCH signals a potential shift in market direction. Using clear bullish and bearish chart examples, you’ll see how to identify higher highs, higher lows, lower highs, and lower lows — and understand what each structural break really means.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
• Identify the current market trend
• Recognize structural continuation (BOS)
• Detect early signs of a reversal (CHoCH)
• Avoid confusing continuation with trend change
This concept is a core institutional tool in ICT/SMC trading and is essential for making high-probability trade decisions.
In this lesson, you will learn what Displacement is and why it is considered an institutional signature in the market.
We break down how strong, aggressive candles signal imbalance and momentum, and how displacement differs from normal price movement. Using clear bullish and bearish chart examples, you’ll see how displacement breaks structure with conviction and often leads to powerful directional moves.
By the end of this lesson, you will understand:
• What displacement really means
• How to identify institutional momentum
• Why structure break matters
• How displacement can signal the start of a new move
Displacement is a key building block in ICT and Smart Money Concepts (SMC) trading, and an essential concept for recognizing high-probability setups.
(This course contains the use of artificial intelligence)
Day Trading for Beginners — Price Action & ICT/SMC Trading Strategies
This course is designed for absolute beginners who want to learn day trading the right way — using price action, market structure, and professional trading concepts instead of guessing, hype, or indicator overload.
You will learn how professional traders analyze price charts and make logical trading decisions using Price Action and ICT / Smart Money Concepts (SMC).
The trading principles taught in this course are universal and can be applied to many financial markets including:
• Cryptocurrency markets (Bitcoin, Ethereum and other altcoins)
• Forex currency pairs
• Stock markets and indices
• Commodities and metals such as Gold
For clarity and simplicity, many of the chart examples in this course use Bitcoin (BTCUSDT) because crypto markets are active 24 hours a day and provide excellent real-world trading examples.
However, the concepts you learn here can be applied to any liquid financial market.
What You’ll Learn in This Course
How candlestick charts actually work (without memorizing dozens of patterns)
The key candlestick behaviors that matter in real markets
Support and resistance explained in a simple and practical way
Market structure: higher highs, lower lows, trends and ranging markets
How professional traders read price action
Introduction to ICT / Smart Money Concepts used by institutional traders
Liquidity, market manipulation and how price seeks liquidity
How to identify high-probability trade setups
Beginner-friendly risk management principles
How to practice trading safely using demo accounts
Common mistakes new traders make — and how to avoid them
All concepts are explained step by step using real charts, so nothing feels abstract or confusing.
Teaching Style & Voice Explanation (Important)
Most lessons in this course use high-quality AI-generated voice narration (Text-to-Speech) to provide:
• Clear and consistent explanations
• A smooth listening experience
• Better focus on charts and visual demonstrations
A small portion of lessons use the instructor’s real voice recordings.
The course structure, explanations, and trading framework are 100% designed by the instructor — AI is used only for voice narration.
This allows you to focus entirely on learning the charts and trading concepts.
Who This Course Is For
Complete beginners to day trading
People who want to learn Price Action and ICT / Smart Money Concepts
Traders who feel overwhelmed by too many indicators
Anyone who wants a clean and logical way to analyze markets
Students who want trading skills that work in Crypto, Forex, Stocks and Gold
Who This Course Is NOT For
People looking for get-rich-quick systems
Advanced traders expecting complex algorithms or automated trading bots
This course focuses on price action and professional trading concepts that work across many financial markets.
Although some demonstrations use cryptocurrency charts, the same strategies can be applied to:
Crypto markets
Forex currency pairs
Stock markets
Indices
Commodities such as Gold
The goal of this course is to help you build a strong trading foundation that you can apply to any market you choose to trade.
Topics Covered
Day Trading
Price Action Trading
ICT Trading Concepts
Smart Money Concepts (SMC)
Market Structure Trading
Liquidity and Institutional Trading Concepts
Candlestick Chart Analysis
Technical Analysis for Beginners
Crypto Trading Basics
Forex Trading Fundamentals
Stock Market Trading Basics
Gold and Commodity Trading
Support and Resistance Trading
Risk Management for Traders
Futures and Derivatives Trading
Long and Short Positions
Leverage Trading Fundamentals
AI Voice Disclosure
Some lessons in this course use AI-generated text-to-speech (TTS) narration. All course content, structure, and explanations are fully created by the instructor.