A couple of weeks ago I attended a presentation on a Friday morning at the Marriott next to the airport and got a free continental breakfast, a free thumb drive that is now ready for saving whatever files I like, and a free Amazon fire 7 mini tablet with Alexa, which I sold on e-bay for $34.00.Everything they teach can be found for free on line.
The other six people at the presentation all signed up for the $200 three-day course scheduled for early December, so OTA got their money back for the free food and technology, though I don’t know how much they paid to rent the hotel room for three hours.
I got a call from an OTA coach or whatnot the day before Thanksgiving, and I returned his call today. The guy was cool and didn’t try to twist my arm.
As far as I’m concerned, the only thing OTA might have to offer me is how they come up with their supply and demand zones, or EXT zones, or Mastermind grid levels, or whatever the heck they are calling them these days, but I suspect that in the final analysis, they are nothing more than horizontal support and resistance levels (or areas of consolidation).
OTA also scores these zones in accordance with their strength. But again, I’m willing to bet that this amounts to little more than counting the number of times price has been rejected at those levels. If rejected three times, give the zone a strength score of three. If rejected five times, give the zone a strength score of five.
I find it interesting that OTA is able to get people to shell out hundreds and even thousands of dollars so easily, because when I connect with folks who claim to be interested in online trading, when it comes down to backing up their professed interest with a modicum of actual concerted effort, they always fail to evidence the kind of genuine seriousness I think it takes to learn to trade successfully (kind of like the woman who tuned down the opportunity to speak with someone who has been day trading for 18 years).