kpakpando
@bangirl19
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Let's simplify the charts https://t.co/t05fdVu7QN
Joined October 2014
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HOW TRADERS USE FVG Use Fair value gaps as take-profit zones (price may react there). This implies, trading into the fair value gap Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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How traders use #fairvaluegap Entry points: Wait for price to retrace to the gap before entering in the original direction. That is, trading from the #fairvaluegap Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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FVG In downtrend, look for bearish FVGs as sell zones when price retraces. You don't sell from the bottom Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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FVG In uptrends: look for bullish FVGs as buy zones when price retraces. Offcourse you already know that you shouldn't buy the top Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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maybe $9,700 — re-entering the FVG zone. Here, new sellers rejoin and sell their products because of uncertainties in the market, thereby pushing the price back down to $9,300. The market has filled the gap and then resumed downward. Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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But the price moves so fast that no one trades between $9,900 and $9,600. That $9,900–$9,600 range is the Bearish Fair Value Gap (FVG) — a zone where fair trading didn’t happen. Later, Price will retrace to Fill the Gap As the market calms, price moves back up slightly to
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Sellers panic and rush to sell their stock quickly before the price drops. Hearing the rumor,buyers stopped buying and are waiting for price to drop, nobody wants to buy at $10,000 anymore. Sellers start slashing prices fast: $10,000 to $9,800then to $9,500 within minutes.
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FAIR VALUE GAP(Bearish) So imagine, in the market people are buying bags of rice at $10,000(there is fair trading and the market is balanced) Suddenly,a rumor spreads that rice will soon be cheaper because new imports are coming.
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SELF GLORIFICATION The market has a way of humbling everyone losing trade doesn’t mean you’re a bad trader and winning trade doesn’t also mean you are a genius. Detach your self-worth from the outcome of any single trade. What matters is your process, not one result. Ngwánụ
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Once buyers and sellers trade fairly again, price continues up. This is an example of bullish fvg Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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is the Fair Value Gap, that is a price zone where no fair exchange/trade occurred. Later, when the government did something about it and the panic cools, sellers bring new stock. The price of rice drops back to around ₦11,500, revisiting that skipped range.
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Suddenly, a rumor spreads that rice will be scarce due to cost of importation Buyers rush in and instantly buy everything, pushing prices from $10,000 straight to $13,000. So here, nobody traded between $10,001 and $12,999. This missing range ($10,001–$12,999)
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FAIR VALUE GAP(FVG) This is price inefficiency, it's a type of imbalance in the market. Ok, imagine a marketplace where traders buy and sell bags of rice: Day 1: Sellers offer rice at $10,000. Buyers agree. fair trading happens normally between buyers and sellers. Day 2:
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CONSISTENCY Trading isn’t about how hard you try for one Week or month rather its about showing up calmly and consistently every day. Small progress adds up. Emotional highs and lows destroy focus. Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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Stop loss doesn't just protect your account, it protects your mindset Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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THE POWER OF STOP LOSS Peace of mind: When you know your risk is controlled, you can trade calmly, you don’t have to watch the screen constantly or worry about every candle movement. Knowing you have protection in place helps you trade calmly and logically.
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because of emotions. But with a stop loss, your system automatically sells the bag at $90. You take a small, planned loss and move on. No panic, no emotion. Ngwánụ, ka ọ dị
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sell it off. I don’t want to lose more than $10. The bag price falls to $90. But here is the thing without a stop loss, emotions kick in: You will hope that it rise again, so you hold onto it. It drops more to $85, then $80 — and you panic. Now you have lost $20 or more
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A stop loss makes that decision for you — it turns a potential big loss into a controlled small loss Imagine : You buy a bag for $100, expecting to sell it for $120 and make a $20 profit. But you decided already that: if the market price of this bag drops to $90, I’ll stop and
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