price action trading strategy

Let’s be honest: your trading chart looks like a Picasso painting had a mid-life crisis. Between the RSI screaming “overbought,” the Bollinger Bands squeezing the life out of your soul, and the three different moving averages crossing like a bad game of Twister, it’s a miracle you can even find the price.

Here is the cold, hard truth that most “gurus” won’t tell you: your indicators are lying to you. They are lagging. They are math-based derivatives of what already happened. If you’re trying to drive your trading account into the green by looking only at the rearview mirror, don’t be surprised when you hit a wall.

In this breakdown of our latest session, we’re stripping the “Christmas tree” lights off your charts and getting back to the only thing that actually moves the needle: Price Action and Supply and Demand.

The Retail Trap: Why Your “Support and Resistance” Fails

Most people learn to trade stocks and forex by reading a 20-year-old book that tells them to buy at a line on a chart. Congratulations, you’ve just volunteered to be liquidity for a bank in London.

Institutional players don’t care about your “Death Cross.” They care about imbalances. When a massive bank wants to buy $500 million worth of EURUSD, they can’t just click a button. They leave footprints. Those footprints are Supply and Demand zones.

A Supply and Demand trading strategy isn’t about guessing where price might go; it’s about identifying where the “Smart Money” has already left their orders waiting. If you aren’t trading at the source of the move, you’re just gambling on the noise.

Price Action Strategies: The Language of the Market

Stop looking for “signals” and start reading the story. Price action trading is about understanding the battle between buyers and sellers in real-time.

When we see a Rally-Base-Drop or a Drop-Base-Rally, we aren’t just looking at candles; we are looking at a vacuum of orders. The “base” is where the institutions fought, and the “departure” is who won.

  • The Pro Tip: If the departure from a zone is violent, the imbalance is huge.
  • The Reality Check: If price “drifts” away from your level like a lazy Sunday afternoon, that level is garbage. Throw it away.

Swing Trading vs. Intraday Trading: Choosing Your Poison

If you enjoy high blood pressure, staring at 1-minute charts, and paying your broker more in commissions than you make in profit, then high-speed intraday trading strategies are for you.

Intraday trading is the “Formula 1” of the markets—high risk, high speed, and most people crash on the first corner. It’s noisy, it’s manipulated, and it’s designed to hunt your stop loss.

On the flip side, Swing Trading is for the adults in the room. By focusing on higher time frames (Daily, Weekly, Monthly), you filter out the “market static.”

  • Intraday: You’re a slave to the screen.
  • Swing: You “Set and Forget.” You find the zone, set your limit order, and go live your life.

The market doesn’t pay you for how many hours you stare at the candles; it pays you for being right. And it’s a lot easier to be right when you aren’t zoomed in so far that you can see the pixels.

How to Actually Learn to Trade Stocks and Forex

If you’re ready to stop being a “retail sheep” and start trading with a rule-based, mechanical framework, here is your three-step plan:

  1. Delete the Indicators: Yes, all of them. Even the one your “mentor” told you was the secret sauce.
  2. Identify the Imbalance: Look for where price moved aggressively. That is your zone.
  3. Wait for the Return: Don’t chase the market. If price doesn’t come back to your level, there is no trade. Period.

The market is a giant machine designed to transfer money from the impatient to the patient. Which one are you?

Stop guessing. Start observing.

Ready to stop being the liquidity and start being the trader? Check out the Supply and Demand Trading Courses and see the charts in action.

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High Risk Warning: Forex, Futures, and Options trading has large potential rewards, but also large potential risks. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. You must be aware of the risks of investing in Forex, futures, and options and be willing to accept them in order to trade in these markets. Forex trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Please do not trade with borrowed money or money you cannot afford to lose. Any opinions, news, research, analysis, prices, or other information contained on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. We will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from the use of or reliance on such information. Please remember that the past performance of any trading system or methodology is not necessarily indicative of future results.

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