
Learn a complete trading plan, study market trends, and manage risk. Understand how emotions influence decisions to trade with confidence and improve profitability.
Discover how a professional forex fractal analysis strategy differs from an amateur one through six interdependent dimensions: principles, tripod of success, risk management, psychology, logic, and plan.
Contextual trading combines several techniques to confirm price movements, reducing dimensional loss and Bonini's paradox, and using multiple time frames for clearer, more consistent decisions.
Apply multi-time frame analysis to reveal market patterns across scales using fractal ideas from chaos theory. Balance insight from different time frames to avoid analysis paralysis and objective blindness.
Explore multi-time frame analysis across monthly, weekly, daily, four hour, one hour, 15 minutes, five minutes, one minute charts, noting longer frames yield stronger signals and shorter frames add detail.
Learn to identify near turning points using contextual analysis across time frames. Set tight stop losses and take profits to balance small risk with big reward through fractal-aware technical analysis.
Apply multi-time frame and fractal analysis to understand market movements across time scales, guiding trade duration, risk, and momentum-based opportunities.
Explore how subjective interpretation shapes forex trading, including price and risk biases. Understand market complexity and use a trading plan to balance perspectives and price action.
Compare standard and advanced technical analysis to understand price action and indicators. Avoid over-smoothing data and lag by embracing fractal analysis and chaotic market principles to reveal underlying order.
Combine momentum divergence with fractal momentum analysis to form fractal reversal and fractal hybrid divergences, guiding the fractal momentum strategy and fractal candle insights.
Explore market momentum and divergence by comparing price action with momentum signals like RSI, and integrate these insights into fractal momentum analysis for clearer market moves.
learn to add a RSI indicator to your chart on TradingView or any platform, set RSI length to 4, and remove the RSI based moving average for analysis.
Explore fractal analysis in market analysis, where patterns repeat across scales, identify market fractals of highs and lows, and use interactions of market movements to pinpoint entry and exit points.
Learn to combine simple divergence with fractal analysis and multi-time frame analysis to identify fractal reversal divergences and precise reversal points across timeframes using divergent price territory and rsi.
Analyze fractal hybrid divergence, blending fractal analysis with hidden and reversal divergences to identify safer trend continuations using larger-timeframe hidden signals and smaller-timeframe reversals with RSI patterns.
Explore the fractal candle, a tool from fractal analysis that links price peaks with RSI peaks to identify second degree fractal reversal divergence across time frames.
Explore extra tools, including two kinds of support and resistance lines, to read prices, interpret candlestick bodies and tails, and enable fractal analysis for trend-based trading ideas.
Discover support and resistance lines, horizontal and slope, built on market memory and price extremes, and use multi-timeframe analysis with energy points to identify useful lines and price action.
Identify market trends by analyzing market structure and market vectors, recognizing uptrends and downtrends through highs and lows, and distinguishing confirmed versus fake structures, with chart practice in future lessons.
Discover risk management as the foundation for long-term forex success, focusing on risk-reward ratios, adapting to changing markets, and integrating technical analysis with trading psychology.
Explore risk management through the risk reward ratio, showing how stop loss and take profit shape expectancy, and why ratios greater than one beat win rate for sustainable profitability.
Master risk reward ratios to create a margin of error in trading, using 1:3 or 1:5 gains to balance losses and stay calm and confident.
discover how risk contraction and expansion keeps your risk per trade constant by adjusting position size to stop-loss pips, using a simple formula and currency-specific pip values.
Explore two position sizing methods for forex trading—linear and moving threshold—adjusting trade size by a set percent of your balance, with guidance on risk, margins, and stress management.
Learn shooting stops forward to manage risk by treating risk as 'stops' rather than percentages, reducing trading stress and the impact of losses while aiming for high risk-reward setups.
Explore prospect theory and cognitive biases and how they influence risk decisions in trading. Understand the bias blind spot and time perception to improve decision making.
Explore prospect theory, a Kahneman-developed framework showing how framing gains and losses shapes traders' risk choices, guided by heuristics and the unequal impact of gains versus losses.
Explore how cognitive biases from evolution shape behavioral economics in trading, and apply a disciplined trade plan to curb emotion-driven, impulsive decisions.
Identify how the availability heuristic biases trading by favoring the easiest to remember information, and adopt a thorough, context-based analysis rather than quick entry and exit signals.
Identify attentional bias as a thinking error that makes traders overemphasize news and distractions, hindering unbiased market analysis. Focus on market data and trends in a quiet environment.
Explore how the illusory truth effect makes repeated information seem true and tempts forex traders with flawed strategies. Learn to critically assess information and base decisions on rational evaluation.
Assess how mood congruent bias links current mood to memory recall and trading decisions, and learn to maintain a balanced, objective mindset to avoid optimism-driven or pessimism-driven errors.
Spotlights the Baader-Meinhoff phenomenon, or frequency illusion, and shows how it can bias traders toward narrow analysis in financial markets. The course promotes multi-perspective analysis to avoid this trap.
Explore the empathy gap as a bias that skews traders' perception of emotions, underestimating instincts and overestimating personal reactions, and learn to pause and reassess risk.
Recognize the Semmelweis reflex as an automatic denial of new evidence, and learn to replace confrontation with reasoned, calm discussion to grow as a forex trader.
Analyze omission bias in trading, weighing actions and inactions, and learn when passive or active decisions, like a sniper, yield better results aligned with risk management and prospect theory.
The von Restorff effect, or isolation effect, explains how traders focus on standout information in financial markets, revealing how market makers exploit this bias to trigger impulsive retail reactions.
Explore the focusing effect in forex trading, where traders overemphasize a single winning trade among ten and ignore luck, losses, and risk management to critically assess performance.
The Weber-Fechner law shows that our perception of change is arithmetical while actual changes are geometric, causing traders to underestimate risk as capital exposure grows.
Explore how confirmation bias shapes forex trading by favoring information that confirms beliefs and ignores failures. Learn to weigh strengths and weaknesses and consider scenarios for a balanced, context-driven approach.
Explore the bias blind spot to recognize how you spot biases in others but overlook your own, and learn to minimize their impact on forex analysis and decisions.
Understand the clustering illusion: traders overinterpret small data samples, mistaking short streaks for meaningful patterns. Recognize this bias to improve risk management and avoid false trading signals.
Explore naive realism, the belief that senses reveal reality without illusion. Learn to guard against arrogance by questioning sensory and cognitive judgments, with practical insights for trading discipline.
Explore the gambler's fallacy in forex markets, recognizing that each trade is independent and that past losses do not make future wins more likely, with insights into the martingale strategy.
The hot hand fallacy, like the gambler's fallacy, tempts traders to expect future wins from current luck. Focus on consistent, well-informed decision making rather than luck or chance.
Explain how the bandwagon effect strengthens beliefs when others share them. Illustrate how group dynamics drive impulsive trades, using intuition or support and resistance, which market makers exploit.
Explain how zero sum bias assumes a trader's gain equals another's loss in an objective market, while sentiment adds a subjective layer that makes the market not zero sum.
overcome the hindsight bias by analyzing past market events with impartiality to gain true insights into how the forex market behaves and learn from history.
Assess how outcome bias judges decision quality by results, and recognize how focusing on successful points in historical charts can mislead traders about strategy performance.
Explore restraint bias and how overestimating impulse control affects trading decisions, highlighting the role of primitive impulses, rational planning, and evolved instincts in financial markets.
Identify the overconfidence effect in trading, explore how excessive confidence harms long-term performance, and learn to balance emotions to maintain a reasonable level of confidence.
Explore the dunning-kruger effect in forex trading, where inexperienced traders overestimate skills while knowledgeable traders are cautious, highlighting the risks and the need for balanced, informed decision making.
Explore the Peltzman effect, a risk compensation bias where safety measures prompt riskier behavior. Apply this bias to forex stop loss use, avoiding overconfidence that raises long-term risk.
Explore hyperbolic discounting and its impact on trader behavior. Understand how preference for quick rewards distorts risk-reward ratios and leads to unstable short trades.
Examine the sunk cost fallacy in trading, where past losses distort future judgments, echoing the gambler's fallacy. Learn to reset after losses and maintain a healthy trading mindset.
Explore how irrational escalation drives traders to persist in bad decisions during losing streaks, a cognitive bias that deepens losses toward a margin call and a cascading, emotionally charged cycle.
The zero risk bias leads traders to seek complete risk elimination, but effective forex strategies reduce risk while exposing traders to high quality opportunities in financial markets.
Explore the disposition effect in trading: learn how emotions drive selling winners early and holding losers, and why stop loss and take profit orders support disciplined forex strategies.
Explore how reverse psychology functions in forex markets as market makers entice traders by signaling one direction while intending the opposite, manipulating prices and deceiving others.
Explore the less-is-better effect and the paradox of oversimplifying complex markets. Recognize how embracing complexity in trading, rather than seeking easy answers, yields better forex insights.
Explore operational logic to manage trades, set stop losses and profit targets, and control risk within a fractal analysis strategy.
Balance impulsiveness and deliberation through a structured trade plan. Outline global variables and individual trade contexts to guide decisions, tracking, and bias-aware review.
Analyze gbpusd 15-minute price action to identify a buyer zone and RSI divergences, using a fractal candle for a long entry with a 3-to-1 target and stop below the low.
Analyze USDCAD on the 15-minute chart to identify hidden bullish divergence, RSI divergence reversal, and fractal candle, then enter long with a stop below the candle low and 3:1 risk-reward.
Analyzes Nasdaq 30-minute chart; downtrend shifts to uptrend after breaking highs with a candle, signaling a buyer zone and RSI bullish hidden divergence for long entry toward 3 to 1.
Analyze the GBPJPY 15-minute chart using a gap as resistance, hidden bearish divergence, and a fractal candle to enter short trades with a minimum 3 to 1 risk-reward.
Analyze AUDUSD on the 1-hour chart to show bullish reversal divergence, fractal and outside candles, and a long entry with 3:1 risk-reward.
Apply forex fractal analysis strategy to analyze the market and identify entry opportunities. Prioritize risk reward ratio over win rate and explore trading psychology and biases to improve long-term success.
In this course, you will learn a powerful strategy called ‘Fractal Analysis’. Using this strategy you can trade FOREX as well as other markets, including stock and crypto.
What makes this strategy different from others?
Very simple.
This strategy is based on a scientific approach to the financial markets when we analyze price action in combination with momentum. Since financial markets have fractal structures, you can use this strategy in any time frame that you prefer. Using this strategy you will understand how to find sniper entries even if you don’t jump between timeframes.
Also, you will better understand risk management and that win rate is not the most important thing in trading. But there is a more important concept that you have to pay attention to.
After this course, you will know more about trading psychology than most traders. You will learn psychological biases that affect your trading and you will be able to find them and deal with them to be more successful. These biases were discovered by scientists. And one of these scientists won the Nobel Prize in economics.
Also, in the practical section, I will analyze the market and will be searching for entries so you can better understand the theoretical part on real-life examples.
I hope that this course will help you become a better trader. So what are you waiting for? Welcome to the course!