where can i learn PRICE ACTION trading ?

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There are many ways to exit winning positions initiated with a trend-following strategy: trailing stop based on previous swing high or low, close below/above a moving average, 3-bar low/high, breakout of a trendline, parabolic SAR, etc...
risk/reward. IF i understand your question correctly that is.
He talked about dynamic exits, I asked about rules. They have to be a function of some variables (mb category of variables like momentum-based technical indicators, technical levels) I asked which one he uses.
 
There are many ways to exit winning positions initiated with a trend-following strategy: trailing stop based on previous swing high or low, close below/above a moving average, 3-bar low/high, breakout of a trendline, parabolic SAR, etc...
How do we justify they work & work for dynamic targets, why does lagging indicators are good signal for exit or changing exit target??
 
I don't use price action much but here is a small tip: just write down the price in every 5 minutes and observe what does it do in next movement. Don't guess. Just keep writing down
 
first learn daily patterns buy all the old trading books you can at a discount from joe ross, larry williams, toby crabel, zillions of others. if i were you i would stop right there cause you can make plenty of money and have less stress than moving into intraday.
 
I'm so confused when trying to find reliable sources to learn about Price Action. Can anyone recommend me?

I can teach you. $200 per hour. Probably less than 100 hours total, depending on how quickly you learn. I work on daily charts only. No day-trading.
 
I'm so confused when trying to find reliable sources to learn about Price Action. Can anyone recommend me?
Personally, I've always like the Pristine-based school of traders, even if they don't necessarily describe themselves as "price action" traders. (There are about a dozen offshoots from the original service.) YourTradingCoach (YTC)/Lance Beggs also seems pretty solid as a starting point, although I haven't delved into his material in detail. Both offer tons of *free* resources -- blogs, articles, newsletters, webinars, YT videos, etc. I generally suggest people check stuff out that way first to get a feel for what they do, how they teach, etc. before even considering committing to paying for a sub or buying a course. Put some time & effort into maxing out on the free stuff first -- there's enough to keep you busy for thousands of hours... and only then consider paying for more.

Lots of traders recommend Al Brooks for learning PA, but I think he might be better after/if you get deeper into it. Very technical, tedious and dry, even if it's good stuff.

(Not affiliated with any of the above, have nothing to sell you.)
 
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