Watch price action and understand what it's likely to do before it does it now

- What it would take for you to find consistency, and how many handles how many full handle moves in an index futures contract that would satisfy you
- You don't need to be a part of some kind of signal generating gimmick. You don't need to be a part of a signal service.
- What is the market likely to draw to
- Get a read on what you think that next weekly candle is going to do
- Above old highs, buy stops | below old lows, sell stops
- No student ever should try to trade every single session every single day, because the only thing you're doing is building an expectation that you're going to be able to do this every single day properly. And then if you do get a run of profitability, soon as you get a losing trade, it's going to blow your mind, and you're gonna want to correct it quickly, and you're gonna start making irrational decisions. And then you enter that loser cycle I've talked about many times in the channel.
- Majority of your analysis should really be linked to daily chart

1h chart
- Buy stops rests above that short term high
- Sell stops rest below the short term low
- Market trades down initially and takes out the sell stops - engineers liquidity
- Sucker play initial move

15m chart
- Traders are now tripped in going short if they sold on a break, trying to be a breakout artists
- Algorithms go right back up to an area where it's been cleanly delivered3
- Before there's a significant price move of any real magnitude or importance? Generally there's going to be a stop hunt that takes place right before that price delivery occurs
- The market goes up when we're expecting lower prices on that weekly chart

larger pool of liquidity, it's going to be resting here, because it's in sync with the downtrend (buy side liquidity area)
- Once this occurs, you want to drop down to your lower timeframes and start looking for something specific (right side displacement and drop)
