
The Proven ICT Forex Trading Strategy
The Proven ICT Forex Trading Strategy is a comprehensive course based on the "Inner Circle Trader" (ICT) methodology developed by Michael J. Huddleston. This strategy shifts away from traditional retail indicators (like RSI or MACD) and focuses on how large institutional "Smart Money" participants move the market.
The course typically breaks down the market using several proprietary concepts designed to identify where institutional orders are placed and where retail traders are being "trapped."
Market Structure: Identifying the narrative of the market through Breaks of Structure (BOS) and Market Structure Shifts (MSS) to determine the true trend.
Liquidity Pools: Locating "Buy-side" and "Sell-side" liquidity—areas where retail stop-losses are clustered, which institutions target to fill their large orders.
Order Blocks: Specific candlestick formations representing institutional buying or selling interest.
Fair Value Gaps (FVG): Identifying price imbalances or "inefficiencies" that the market often returns to fill before continuing its move.
Kill Zones: Specific time windows (London and New York sessions) where volatility and institutional activity are at their peak.
Why this is an Investment, not a Cost:
The "One Trade" Logic: For many traders, $150 is less than the cost of a single poorly managed stop-loss. This course pays for itself by teaching you how to avoid just one or two "retail trap" trades.
Skill Compounding: Unlike a subscription service, once you learn the ICT methodology, the knowledge is yours forever. It is an asset that appreciates as you gain experience.
Time Savings: You are paying to skip months of "trial and error."
What’s Included in Your $150 Investment:
Lifetime Access: Re-watch core modules as the market evolves.
Downloadable Videos: a step by step course to gain your first profit!
Risk Transformation Module: A deep dive into the math of consistency (How to stay profitable with a 40% win rate).
"An investment in knowledge pays the best interest." — Benjamin Franklin