Power Charting – Intermediate to Advanced Intensive Q&A Video
Salepage : Power Charting – Intermediate to Advanced Intensive Q&A Video
Archive : Power Charting – Intermediate to Advanced Intensive Q&A Video Digital Download
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Product Description
Intermediate to Advanced Q&A Session
Indicators, Moving Averages, Support and Resistance Levels, Fibonacci, Setups, Entries, Exits, Stops*, Market Events, News, and Trading Psychology are all covered in this course’s over 4 hours of comprehensive Q&A. This rigorous course was not to be missed!
Covered Topics and Tips
2 pullback and bar break trades
2 bar traditional setup
Use of 20 MA – prefer 15min chart
Accepting and exiting a lost trade
The ADX indication
Paralysis by analysis
Broadband and reception in different countries
Buy resistance and sell support (Trend)
Capital to be put at risk in trading
Markets for cash vs. futures (crazy/stock research)
Lines that go through channels
Why not use additional chart patterns?
Lower time frame charts
Trading on a one-minute chart (does not use)
The bar is closed for business.
Zones of congestion
Daily graph
Divergences
Do not exchange situations and money management.
McGee and Edwards
The Elliot wave
Fibanocci
Wait for the bar to shut before trading with a fish hook.
Failures, a fish hook, and a bent finger (counter trend)
Filling in the blanks
Speedlines with a high likelihood and 20 MA
Averages of movement
Priority Pivot Points
The bulk of the time, pivot points – R2 levels
Price action, economic reports, and premarket analysis
Price Action in Comparison to Others (Relative importance)
Price has memory.
Scaling losses and trades
Configure hit list – System check
Setup caliber (Science vs Art of trading)
Slippage
Speedlines
Stops and incorrect entries
Stops, chat rooms, and their applications
Support and opposition levels (profit and exits)
Pullbacks and trending trades
VIX, as well as entry and exit points
Day trading technical analysis
How to Understand Technical Analysis: Discover Technical Analysis
In finance, technical analysis is a system for anticipating price direction based on prior market data, particularly price and volume.
Many of the instruments used in behavioral economics and quantitative analysis are also used in technical analysis, which, as a part of active management, contradicts much of contemporary portfolio theory.
The efficient-market theory, which claims that stock market prices are inherently unpredictable, challenges the usefulness of both technical and fundamental analysis.
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