Cleazzy
420 posts


@Eddie_Fibonacci 100%
The best Hour Stat trades are the ones that sweep quick and return back through that move quick, something like this. These will be the cleanest and easiest moves.

English

When trading Hourly Stats you're essentially trading a Turtle Soup.
That is also the reason why the sweeps that happen between 0-20 minutes of a new hourly candle are so successful for price returning back to the open.
This also means that we want to see price return to the open very quickly after a sweep. Otherwise it might not be a TS after all...
And data (NQ 10 years M1) shows this as well. As a rule of thumb, if you are in a trade you might want to consider going BE or bail out if price did not reach the open yet after 10-15 minutes after the sweep.
@NQStats

English
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi
Cleazzy retweetledi

You're so close.
You can almost feel it, but you are just not sure if you can achieve it.
Let me tell you something.
You might be one lecture away,
You might be one backtest session away,
You might be one late night focus session away,
From experiencing your biggest lightbulb moment yet.
Don't throw in the towel now.
I don't care how shitty your situation might be.
I don't care how much pain you might experience right now.
There's only one solution to solving your current situation and that is moving forward.
KEEP MOVING FORWARD.
Your future self will thank you for persevering.

English
Cleazzy retweetledi

The Plan To Make $15,000/Month Profit with 90 Minutes A Day.
I've been trading for 5 years now.
And in the first 3 years, I was unprofitable. I lost over $20,000 to the markets.
I learned a lot of lessons along the way.
Some of them go against the conventional advice you hear.
I started trading as a way to make a living in 2020.
Now, my focus is much bigger than that.
I want to make money while having complete freedom over my life.
- Time freedom
- Location freedom
- Financial freedom
Fortunately, trading allows me to achieve all three.
I can work for less than 2 hours per day (time freedom)
I can work from any country (location freedom)
And I can make a living from it (financial freedom)
I'm a full-time trader now, and I don't trade for more than 90 minutes a day.
This allows me to spend more time with family, pursue my hobbies, and travel the world.
I want to show you how I did it...
So, I'm starting a public challenge.
The goal is to get to $15,000/month from scratch.
Without trading for more than 90 mins a day.
This way, I can make money while having time to do what I love.
------
Here's The Plan:
1. A simple trading strategy to use
I thought I needed to learn 20 different concepts to be profitable.
But when I studied other profitable traders in the industry...
I saw they all had a simple and clear trading plan.
Their charts weren't filled with 20 different indicators and drawings.
They were simple.
Now, I have a simple trading plan I follow.
It's the CISD Framework and the only trading plan I use.
I have different entry models based on CISDs.
And I use them to execute my trades.
No more complex charts or theories.
It's just a simple, reliable strategy to follow.
-----
2. Managing psychology
When I started, psychology was a big issue for me.
I used to enter into setups without confirmation.
Or get fearful and exit a trade early.
Greed, fear, impatience - I had it all.
I no longer struggle with psychology because I have a solid trading plan.
However, I still keep track of my emotions while trading to ensure I'm on the right path.
So my students can see how I manage my emotions while trading.
I keep them accountable, and they keep me accountable.
-----
3. Risk management
Risk management is key when trading.
Over risk, and you can blow your account.
Under risk, and you won't make any progress.
Following a pre-determined risk is very helpful when trading.
So you know exactly how much to risk when trading.
There's no second-guessing right before you enter a trade.
Fortunately, this is the easiest part of trading.
-----
4. Market conditions
Knowing when not to trade is much more important than knowing when to trade.
Making money is easy, but keeping money is tough.
That's why a lot of traders are unprofitable.
Because they keep giving back their profits to the market.
I know how to identify low-probability trading days and sit them out.
This ensures I don't give back my profits due to bad price action.
Losses are inevitable, but I can definitely minimize them.
-----
5. Freedom over profit
This is my favorite bit.
A lot of people make 6-figures a year at their job.
But very few have freedom over their life.
Let's say I had 2 options:
Option A - Make $15k/month in 2 hours a day
Option B - Make $20k/month in 10 hours a day
I'm choosing Option A any day of the week.
The extra money is useless if I can't enjoy it.
I won't sacrifice time with my loved ones for some extra cash.
So, I have a rule for myself:
I'm only trading for 90 minutes a day (or less)
This is enough for me to make a living.
While having the freedom to do what I wish in my spare time.
-----
This is the plan.
All that's left is execution.
I'll keep you updated as I go.
Follow me @TritonTrades for the journey.
And join the free newsletter for daily updates.
Link in bio.

English
Cleazzy retweetledi

Imagine you’re a trader at a prop firm. The traders have a 10 lot max and €400 a day loss limit.
One of the traders, a desk over, goes all in 10 on the first trade, a minute after the open, hits their risk limit and stops out for the day a few minutes later.
The head of risk argues:
“Why not have traded a 2 or 3 lot? You’d have stopped out and still had a lot of ammo left for the rest of the day?”
The trader replies:
“I thought that trade would very likely be the best opportunity of the day!”
Risk replies:
“But you can’t know what the best opportunity of the day will be until the day has ended!”
The trader answers:
“I think you can”.
Assuming you don’t know the track record of the trader in question, which side of the argument would you take? The risk managers or the traders?
English












