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Narkomar.eth

@narkomar_eth

Celestia!

Katılım Ocak 2020
45 Takip Edilen27 Takipçiler
Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
What should the next educational thread cover? Drop a number below. 1 — Win Rate vs Expectancy (why most traders focus on the wrong number) 2 — The 3 Entry Triggers I Use on Every Trade (confluence, confirmation, timing) 3 — Support and Resistance Are Not Lines (zones, context, and why most traders draw them wrong) 4 — 3 Types of Stop Loss (and when to use each) Most voted topic gets covered this week. All this free educational content is sponsored by @_WOO_X — trade with zero fees on spot. wooxpro.com/en-US/invite/P…
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Spicy
Spicy@spicyofc·
I built a Custom Volume Indicator will make it easier to see: • increasing/decreasing vol • abnormally high vol spikes I also have a detailed article on how to use volume as a daytrader if you want the free tool, let me know in the comments ↓
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Tokyo
Tokyo@otokyo__·
Women deal with periods, pregnancy, menopause wtf do men deal with ?
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Koroush AK
Koroush AK@KoroushAK·
Free Trading Journal Just finished a major round of updates to my free trading journal, and recorded a video tutorial. Will release it this week. If you want access let me know in the comments. ↓
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Narkomar.eth
Narkomar.eth@narkomar_eth·
@SailorManCrypto How is it that we place short for BTC and long for PUMP, aren’t you afraid that if BTC drops it will drag entire alt market as usual?
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
I placed limit orders for a long trade in crypto. It was ages since i pressed something green, please market don’t disappoint me! Let me bullieve once again!
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
How I Read a Chart in 60 Seconds. Most traders open a chart and immediately start drawing lines. Trendlines, fibs, indicators stacked on indicators. No structure. No process. Just visual noise. This educational post is sponsored by @_WOO_X, where I trade crypto with zero fees on spot. I have been doing this for years. When I open a chart cold — no context, no bias, nothing — I know what I'm looking at within 60 seconds. Not because I'm fast. Because I follow the same 5 steps every single time. Here they are. STEP 1 — HTF Structure First (Weekly / Daily) Before anything else, I zoom out. Weekly or Daily chart. Clean. No indicators yet. I'm asking one question: what is the trend? Higher highs and higher lows? Bullish structure. Lower highs and lower lows? Bearish structure. Neither? Then we're in a range — and that changes everything. If it's trending, I want to know where we are in that trend. Are we near a key support? Pushing into resistance? Mid-leg with no reference points? If it's ranging, I define the boundaries first. Where is the range high? Where is the range low? Because in a range, the strategy flips completely — you're not chasing breakouts, you're fading extremes and waiting for deviation. This step takes 10 seconds. And it eliminates 80% of bad trades before they start. STEP 2 — Key Levels + Liquidity Now I mark levels. But here's the rule: 2 or 3 levels maximum. Not 15. I want the levels where price has reacted multiple times. The ones that are obvious. If you have to squint to see whether it's a level — it's not a level. Then I look at liquidity. Where are the equal highs? Where are the equal lows? Where are the stop clusters likely sitting? Liquidity is the fuel. Price needs it to move. If there's a pool of liquidity sitting above a range high, I know price is likely going to hunt it before reversing. If there are clean equal lows below support, the market will sweep them. This is not about drawing every level you can find. It's about identifying the 2-3 zones where the real action will happen — and understanding where the liquidity traps are. STEP 3 — Market Phase Now I identify the phase. Every market is always in one of four phases: 1. Accumulation — price is basing after a downtrend. Low volatility, tight range, smart money is loading. 2. Markup — the trend begins. Higher highs, higher lows. This is where most of the easy money is made. 3. Distribution — price is topping after an uptrend. Same low volatility and tightness as accumulation, but at the top. 4. Markdown — the downtrend. Lower highs, lower lows. Exits and shorts. Why does this matter? Because the phase tells you what kind of trade to look for. In accumulation, you're looking for breakout entries. In markup, you're riding the trend on pullbacks. In distribution, you're tightening stops and watching for structure breaks. In markdown, you're either short or on the sideline. If you don't know the phase, you don't know what you're trading. You're just reacting. STEP 4 — LTF Confirmation (4H / 1H) Only now do I zoom in. 4-hour or 1-hour chart. I'm looking for three things: Does the lower timeframe structure agree with my HTF bias? If I'm bullish on the daily, I want to see bullish structure forming on the 4H. Moving averages — are they aligned with my bias? If price is above the 200 EMA/MA on the 4H and both are sloping up, that confirms the bullish read. If they're flat or crossing down while I'm trying to go long, something doesn't fit. RSI — I'm not trading RSI signals. I'm checking for divergence. If price is making a new high on the daily but RSI on the 4H is making a lower high, that's a warning. If price is pushing up and RSI confirms, that's clean. Here's the most important rule of this step: if the LTF disagrees with the HTF, there is no trade. I don't force it. I don't talk myself into it. I wait. The next setup is always around the corner. STEP 5 — Bias in One Sentence After those four steps — 60 seconds total — I should be able to say one sentence: "I'm bullish above X, bearish below Y, and right now price is doing Z." That's it. That's the whole read. If I can say that sentence clearly, I have a bias. I have a framework. I have a plan. Now I can look for entries. If I can't say that sentence — if it feels forced, if I'm unsure, if the data conflicts — then I don't have a read. And that's fine. I close the chart and move to the next one. There are hundreds of charts. Not every one needs to be traded. The discipline to say "I don't have a read" is worth more than any setup. What NOT to Do. Don't start on the 5-minute chart. Ever. The 5-minute chart without context is pure noise. It will give you a bias that contradicts the higher timeframe and you'll lose money following it. Don't draw 15 levels and call it "analysis." If your chart looks like a colouring book, you have too many lines. You don't need more levels — you need fewer, better ones. Don't force a bias because you want a trade. Wanting to trade is not a reason to trade. If the chart doesn't speak to you in 60 seconds, it has nothing to say right now. Don't skip HTF because "it looks good on the 1H." The 1H can look perfect and still be sitting right under daily resistance with bearish divergence on the weekly. Context kills bad trades before they happen. Don't make it complicated. Five steps. Same order. Every chart. Every time. The process is the edge. It's not the indicator. It's not the pattern. It's not the setup. It's the process you follow before you even consider clicking buy or sell. Same steps. Every chart. Every time. No shortcuts. Trade spot with zero fees on WOO X Pro: wooxpro.com/en-US/invite/P…
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
I'm planning the next deep educational post. Help me pick: 1 — The 4 Market Phases (accumulation, markup, distribution, markdown — how to identify each one and what strategy fits) 2 — Why Your Win Rate Doesn't Matter (expectancy, R multiples, and why a 40% win rate can beat a 70% one) 3 — How I Read a Chart in 60 Seconds (my exact process when I open a chart cold — from HTF structure to bias) Drop a number. Whichever wins, I write next week.
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
Every educational post I make, every cheat sheet, every thread — I execute these setups on @_WOO_X. Zero fees on spot. That's not a gimmick, it actually matters when you're scaling in and out of positions. Code POPEYE. wooxpro.com/en-US/invite/P…
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
Time for the next cheat sheet, chose your pick. Drop a number in comments: 1 — Liquidity Sweeps (how to spot a grab vs a real move) 2 — Position Sizing (the 1% rule in practice, how to calculate size from your stop) 3 — Divergence (standard RSI divergence — when it works, when it lies, and how I use it) Which one do you need most?
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
I've been pushing free content for almost 2 years now. Cheat sheets, educational threads, full TA breakdowns, YouTube series — all free. I want to try something new. If you actively trade and deposit using my ref link on @_WOO_X or @OstiumLabs, I will give you access to a private Telegram channel where I share my subscriber articles at the end of every week. Same articles my paying subscribers get. Delivered as PDFs. Every week. No open chat — just articles, straight to your Telegram. No catch — you're already trading, might as well do it through my link and get something back for it. How many of you would actually be interested? Reply so I know if this is worth setting up.
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Narkomar.eth
Narkomar.eth@narkomar_eth·
@SailorManCrypto can you drop those cheetshits (intended ;)) to articles section too? so its easier to track? or have some repositiory of them somewhere?
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Popeye
Popeye@SailorManCrypto·
The Pre-Trade Checklist That Took Me 3 Years to Build. You voted. You chose. Here it is. Most traders lose money not because their analysis is wrong — but because they skip steps. They see a candle move, feel the urgency, and click the button before they've even asked themselves why they're taking the trade. I used to do the same. Then I started tracking every trade, every mistake, and every time I entered without a plan. The pattern was obvious: the losses almost always came when I skipped the process. So I built a checklist: Four phases. Every trade. No exceptions. Here's how it works: PHASE 1 — Before you open the chart. Check the economic calendar. If there's a high-impact event in the next 4 hours, you need to know. Check the macro context — is the environment risk-on or risk-off? Then check your correlations: DXY, SPX, Gold, BTC vs Alts, BTC Dominance, USDT.D. They need to tell a coherent story. And finally — check your current exposure. How many trades are already open? What's your total risk right now? If you're already at 3% deployed, think twice before adding. PHASE 2 — Before you identify a setup. What phase is the market in — range or trend? This changes everything about how you trade. Identify your key levels: VAH, VAL, PoC, previous highs and lows. Mark the liquidity levels — where are the unspent lows and highs that price is likely targeting? And mark the higher timeframe trend on the daily and weekly. You need to know if you're trading with or against the current. PHASE 3 — Before you enter. Does this match one of your setups? If not, it's not a trade. Can you explain your thesis in 2-3 sentences? If you can't, you don't have one. The higher timeframe gives you direction, the lower timeframe gives you the entry — are both aligned? Where is your trigger? MSB, retest, break of structure — what confirms the entry? Where is your stop loss? This is defined before you enter, not after. What's your R:R? Minimum 2R, ideally 3R or more. Position size at 1% risk, no exceptions. And is there confluence? You need at least two TA-based reasons to take this trade. PHASE 4 — Before you click the button. Am I revenge trading or FOMO-ing? Am I sized correctly? Can I walk away from this trade and sleep fine? And the last one — journal entry started. Your thesis is written down before you execute. Not after. This is the difference between trading and gambling. One has a process. The other has hope. Save this. Use it. Every single trade. Popeye
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