Real Results and Transparent Stats Offers help without selling mentorships, courses, or signals. Shows a $100,000 withdrawal and claims $300–$400K weekly trading strictly from personal strategy. Reports a 90% win rate, with 73% of buys and 75% of sells winning. Average holding time is about 7 hours, with the longest around 4 days 6 hours; typical daily profit is roughly $268,000 and the best day hit $2.7M. About 70% of days close green, and a profit factor of 8.1 far exceeds the 3+ benchmark for profitability.
Keep Trading Simple: Market Structure and Price Action Build decisions from fundamentals—market structure and price action—without complex overlays. ICC stands for Indication, Correction, Continuation, viewing the market in phases. Focus on clear entries and exits rather than liquidity theories, order blocks, or pattern clutter. The approach resembles break-and-retest; it isn’t new, it’s just effective.
Higher Timeframes Guide, Lower Timeframes Execute Trade gold and NASDAQ during New York hours, with attention to the 9:00–9:30 a.m. EST open. Analyze structure on the 1-hour or 4-hour charts, choosing whichever is clearer. Refine timing and entries on the 15-minute and sometimes 5-minute charts. Use session volatility to fuel continuation once setups align.
Map Buyers and Sellers with Swing Highs and Lows Treat swing highs/lows as points where price moves one way and then shifts. Highest points reveal where sellers sit; lowest points reveal buyers. If needed, use a pivot points high/low indicator to mark swings. These zones define support, resistance, and the battle lines price must break.
Let Break of Structure Signal the Indication An indication occurs when price breaks decisively above or below a key level, revealing who is in control. A break above a lower high signals bullish potential; a break below support signals bearish intent. Mark that first decisive move as the trigger zone for the next phase. Regard the level as the boundary separating bullish from bearish control.
Read the Correction as Liquidity and Retest Zones After the breakout, expect a pullback that often returns to the breakout level. Liquidity can dip under the retest or into nearby support without violating higher-timeframe structure. View this as the market grabbing money from eager breakout participants before the real move. Patience through the correction sets up a higher-probability continuation.
Confirm the Turn on Lower Timeframes and Enter with Volume On the 15-minute, a buying correction prints lower highs and lows; the end arrives when a lower high breaks and a higher low forms. That flip confirms the correction is over and aligns with the higher-timeframe bias. Enter as price reclaims the key 1-hour level, ideally around New York open when volume kicks in. For sells, invert the logic: failure to make a higher high and a break of a higher low begin the downside flip.
Execute the Long: From 1H Break to New York Push Price broke a 1-hour lower high to give the bullish indication, with London delivering the initial push. The correction pulled back toward the breakout, then the 15-minute began forming higher lows above the level. Around 9:30 a.m. EST, a retest held and price pushed, offering the entry. Place the stop below the intraday support/last low, and target the 1-hour objective, leveraging a 5/15-minute stop with a higher-timeframe take-profit for stronger risk-to-reward.
Execute the Short: 4H Downtrend and Break of Support Sellers erased buyer structure by breaking support, signaling control under the level. Enter below the broken zone, place the stop above the last lower high, and target prior lows for roughly 1:4 potential. The 4-hour downtrend (lower highs and lows) supports holding through pullbacks unless structure reverses. Exit when the 15-minute makes a lower high but fails to print a new low, showing selling momentum has stalled.
A Simple Rule Set: Break, Correct, Flip, Continue Find a swing high or low on the 1-hour or 4-hour and wait for a decisive break as the indication, then let the pullback unfold as the correction. On the 15-minute or 5-minute, confirm the flip: for buys, failure to make a new low followed by a higher low and higher high; for sells, the opposite. Enter above or below the key higher-timeframe level, set the stop beyond nearby structure, and aim for higher-timeframe targets. Trend changes only when structure breaks, and the higher the timeframe, the stronger and longer the move.