Thank you.
It makes complete sense. Despite being aware and trading these setups, I've never consciously termed them as "zones of liquidity". Nice to see something new with old eyes


I'll second that. +1.Thank you.
It makes complete sense. Despite being aware and trading these setups, I've never consciously termed them as "zones of liquidity". Nice to see something new with old eyes![]()
He does, though he has indicated it can be used to time entry for the 5 minute. He also indicated in his books (and possibly in the vids) that there are traders who can trade the 1 if they are personality types that can deal with stress or are fast thinkers. He's mentioned the 3 minute if one finds the 5 too slow. And, Q3, he has stated there is absolutely nothing wrong with trading 15 or 60 minute charts, if that is the preference. If that's the case, it's irrelevant if one believes success is no longer possible on shorter frames.
There is no guessing involved. I have no idea if that particular trade will be the profitable one or the unprofitable one in a series of similar trades
eliminate the guesswork from trading
I have trouble believing Brooks' assertion that major trend reversals such as a higher low on the 5-minute timeframe early in the day following a failed test of a previous day's RTH swing...
I believe Brooks term for that play/setup is a lower high major trend reversal. I would guess your initial risk was based on an area just above the high of the reversal bar, or did you use some other area below or above that?
Understood.Yes, my initial risk would be just above the high of that bar that looks like a reversal bar. (It's only a reversal bar in hindsight; at the hard right edge it's just a price bar formation that candle worshippers refer to as a reversal bar.)
?
, and learned what the term good loser is as opposed to good winner.Just because institutions do not have the intent of running retail stops and that institutions' main focus in on the trading patterns of other institutions does not have any direct relevance to the fact that institutional trading activity instantaneously calculates all open and filled limit orders, stop orders, and market orders and, more importantly, institutions trading against other institutions can often create a hostile environment that will negatively affect retail traders' returns, specifically at lower time frames.
Watch Brooks' 2014 Las Vegas Trader's Expo speech on Youtube, he makes all sorts of glib statements about 3 minute charts being tradable, "5 minute charts are good. Tick charts are good." Plenty of howlers for the whole family to enjoy.
However one cannot assume that the series of apparently profitable trades will repeat itself ad infinitum. I have trouble believing Brooks' assertion that major trend reversals such as a higher low on the 5-minute timeframe early in the day following a failed test of a previous day's RTH swing high can be reified and fit into a probabilistic set of trades spanning decades into the past and future, such a scenario would have to be true to eliminate the guesswork from trading.