[00:02] new trading session, and in this session, we'll be reviewing and analyzing each of our charts so you can understand the trades we're going to make. So pay close attention. Okay, traders, we're here [00:16] with a new trading session and we'll be reviewing each of the charts. For example, this graph we have here. I immediately know that this is not a good chart, that at least any strategy I use is [00:30] very likely to give me negative results. And why do I know this? Because this specific chart does not have a correct structure for the type of operations we enter, and it also has a [00:43] different volume between all its movements. Ideally, each of the movements should follow a similar structure or size so that you have a much more [00:55] predictable operation. In this first chart, simply discarded. Let's move on to the second asset. Here, for example, I also immediately know that I have a ruled-out operation. And how can I know that? Same situation as the previous graph. [01:08] Previously we had a good structure here, but you can see how suddenly the chart started to lose its volume and began to give me strange movements. Therefore, this graph is also immediately and completely [01:22] discarded. It doesn't matter that you might see an operation here in a pattern, in a rejection candle. It's important to understand when a trade is worthwhile or when it's simply better to switch assets. Let's look at the Asia [01:35] Composite Index. For example, this one here can give us an operation. We have a breakout, traders. Pay attention to this. End of trend. Impulse, recoil. Impulse, recoil. When an impulse is no longer greater than the previous one, we [01:50] call this a swing zone. The chart has now broken my last high. So, here we have the breakout entry model. We simply need the chart to show a pullback that touches our line to [02:05] place a bullish trade. Here, all my operations are very similar because I always try to repeat the same thing that works for me. Here we would need a candle that touches my line to insert a [02:20] one-minute parity position upwards and look for the next trend structure. What does this mean? We would be looking for a breakout, pullback, upward momentum here, following the basis of every bullish operation. All the [02:33] operations I perform are similar. That's why in each of the videos I fundamentals, because that's what works and that's what you can easily operate. I don't think this candle will arrive. So, it's very likely that the [02:48] chart will go up to the next candle. I already have my capital ready, I already have my line at this exact point and I think I'm going to trade one minute upwards . Also, as you can see here, it's a variation of a [03:03] ladder pattern. Impulse candle. Retracement candles are no larger than impulse candles. Around this time. And there we would look for the pattern one minute upwards , combining it with our breakout. Here, it doesn't [03:18] candles. I already have the capital ready, $300. There we wait for our candle to close. Attention traders, I'm placing a $300 one-minute trade upwards in a ladder pattern. All our operations must be very similar. [03:34] No matter what strategy or operating method we use, we must follow the same basic principles. Exactly. This ladder pattern that I explained in the last video is exactly what I'm seeing on my chart and it's what I'm [03:48] trading. Something I already know how it works, that has worked for me on many previous occasions, and that gives me an easy understanding of the market. And the chart is giving us the candle we're looking for in the ladder pattern. Let's hope the candle doesn't [04:01] return. Traders. It still has 3 seconds left before it closes. Last second of the trade and we have $273 there in a ladder pattern. And look, I want you to understand something here. This is going to be [04:13] a little more advanced, traders, but the fundamentals are the same as I explained in the previous video. Look, if I had traded with a Fibonacci, here for example, I mark my Fibonacci and I wanted to trade at 61.8, [04:27] I know I have a breakout to the upside and I was looking for the breakout. If I had interpreted the movement in this way, the operation would have been exactly the same or at least on the same basis. [04:41] What do I mean by this? Look closely, I would have waited for my impulse move, which is this one we have here, the retracement that reached the Fibonacci level or that would have reached the Fibonacci level, and I was going to follow the same basis of every [04:55] bullish operation. This, momentum, recoil, momentum, perfect. But since the chart gave me a ladder pattern, maybe a little smaller, but the basis of the operation would have been exactly the same, which is an [05:09] impulse candle, three pullback candles and there I looked for the one minute operation upwards. So, it doesn't matter whether I had operated this break in a shorter period or a longer period. In any case, it would have [05:24] been the same basis. The pullback is no greater than the momentum. What do I mean by this? Whether I had put the operation here or I put the operation here, in both cases it respects the fundamentals. Impulse, recoil, [05:37] impulse, impulse, recoil, impulse. I know it's a little complex to understand at first, but these fundamentals really help you have better opportunities. So let's move on to the next operation. Remember that if [05:49] you want to get started in the world of trading and you also want to open your first binary options trades like I 'm doing right now, in the description of this video you can find links to the brokers and [06:02] trading platforms that I use every day so you can open an account and start placing your first trades. The description also includes a link for traders located in the [06:15] United States or Europe. And finally, traders, don't forget to join our Telegram group to stay informed about all the information and we continued with the operation. For example, this one here. We have a [06:28] example, this one here. We have a downward trend. Impulse, recoil, impulse, recoil, impulse. What's going on here? When we have going on here? When we have an impulse with short pullbacks, what we [06:40] do is look for an extension, a bigger move. So, what's going to happen here? This chart will most likely touch this area between 50 and 61.8 before making a slightly larger pullback [06:56] . When we have a normal trend, what do I mean by a normal trend? You have an impulse and the pullback has a medium depth, that is, if the impulse is 100%, the chart returns to 50%. The next [07:13] impulse move and the pullback is a regular pullback. This tells you that you can trade the entire trend here. You can trade here because the chart is showing regular movements. You can trade there [07:28] with any strategy you want, rejection candles, parities, without any problem, because each of the impulse movements has its respective retracement. Remember that all movements are understood in [07:41] two parts. Impulse with its recoil. Impulse with its recoil. So, if the chart is showing regular pullbacks, you can continue trading the trend. However, what happens if the trend retracements [07:55] are very small? What does this mean? Each impulse lacks an adequate recoil. You can see that here I have a tiny pullback impulse. What is going to happen? In this case, I can't [08:09] trade these small pullbacks because that doesn't count as a pullback. If the trend has very small retracements, then all of this is counted as an extension, as one large movement. And from [08:25] all this big movement, the chart needs a bigger pullback. That's why some traders fail in their trades. Here they wait for the pullback and say, "Ah, very good, here I place a short position." And the chart keeps going down [08:39] and they end up losing their money. This happens because, since the graph has very small movements, it becomes an extension. This is all a momentum movement. Now it has a bigger pullback, and that's where you [08:55] can place your trade downwards, since we now have a much bigger move. This is known as an extension or a Fibonacci extension. So, when you're about to place a trade, [09:10] it's important to check your previous trades to see if you can trade or if you need a larger trade . But I'm telling you, if your chart is showing normal movements with [09:24] regular pullbacks, then you can continue trading the trend without any problem. Down operation here, down operation here, chart is giving you impulses with [09:37] small pullbacks, then what you need to do is wait for a larger pullback and look for your trade here in the spread. So let's continue with the exactly what I was just explaining to you. Look closely, you can see that [09:51] the graph here gave me tiny movements. All of this is a boost. Now the chart shows a larger retracement and is looking for an extension. That's why it's very important to be careful with these types of movements and to always [10:05] check what happened previously in the market. Let's look at this other one. Look, this could give us a chance here. Pay attention. I explained it to you in the previous video and in dozens of other videos. We have to follow this [10:19] same pattern: impulse, pullback, which is no greater than the impulse, and we operate on the bottom. Regardless of the form of the movement, this is what we need to understand, or at least this same idea. So, it's the same here. Impulse, [10:34] recoil. Perhaps visually it's not as noticeable as this one, because we don't control the shape of the candles, but it's the same thing. Here you would be looking to trade on the bottom. Very easy. [10:47] Then the same thing repeats itself again: impulse movement, pullback movement, and you look to operate here at the bottom. Visually it may not be so easy to identify, but it follows the same principles. [11:02] So, in theory, I could put an operation here. Impulse, recoil, impulse, impulse, recoil, impulse. So listen up, traders, I already have the capital ready. Our candle is closing and I'm placing a $300 trade for one [11:16] minute upwards. Now the chart showed me a slightly larger retracement. You can also mark a Fibonacci retracement for a slightly more precise trade, but sometimes I don't mark it anymore because, well, [11:28] traders, after so much practice, after so much trading, you can already tell when you have a good trade, when a candlestick is respecting the levels you need and when you should enter the trade. The [11:42] chart gave us the correct confirmation that it is a large candle that closes exactly on the line. But notice how, without marking the Fibonacci, I already knew that the chart was going to reach 61.8. So let's see here how [11:56] our second trader operation ends . 4 seconds for our candle to close. The candlestick is showing parity and we have $255 one minute up. What happened here? Remember that in a [12:09] previous video I explained that you should try to understand these same fundamentals that I have explained to you in the last videos. Try applying them to each of the graphs regardless of the shape of the movement or how it looks. It will [12:23] always be the same. Look, let's give a quick example here. Let's a chart here that I might not understand at first glance, but this must follow the same principle. Traders, sorry to say it again, but I've [12:37] probably repeated this to you over and over again in 15 videos. But what happens? When some of you or students send me your trades, you're practically doing the opposite, and that's not [12:50] going to give you a positive result. You must always follow the same have to understand, that for every impulse, the pullback is no [13:02] greater than the impulse. This applies in the case of an upward trend, and here we are looking to trade on the downside. Again, sorry to repeat myself, traders, but remember the saying they go around. I am not afraid of the man who trained 10,000 kicks once [13:15] . I fear the man who practiced the same kick 10,000 times. And that's how trading is. You don't have to learn 40 different strategies and apply them once. You have to understand one principle, just one, and apply it again and again [13:29] and again and again until you perfect it. That's why my videos can sometimes sound repetitive at some point, but it's not something that worries me, traders, because these videos I [13:42] trading sessions. If I'm recording myself, entering my trades, at least you can learn something from it and learn exactly what I 'm doing. In fact, if you're learning from these videos, be sure [13:56] keep making them. So, this is exactly what we need to understand, not necessarily operate, but it's the same thing. Impulse, recoil, larger impulse. Operating at the bottom here is the same structure. Listen, you just [14:11] explained to me, pay close attention to this, that when I have short retracements, the chart will give me an extension instead of marking it. That way you mark it as a single movement. It's the principle I just explained to you. From all this [14:26] big momentum, the chart will show us a bigger pullback, but the base, the shape, the structure would be the same, only that each of the charts has a different movement. Your task as a trader, your job as a [14:41] trader is to try to decipher how to make your charts understandable using basic trading principles. So let's see if we can add one last operation to wrap up this video. Here we have a potential breakout [14:56] to the upside, super basic. Let's see how this candle ends. Let's see if I can trade for a minute in an upward direction. I already have the capital ready and I'm betting $300 one minute upwards. This is a slightly irregular breakup, but [15:09] again it's the same thing. Same situation as the first operation. When an impulse is no longer greater than the previous one, this swing zone indicates that the chart is about to change structure. Great, the chart broke our [15:24] last high we have around here. So, the chart shows me the swing zone, breakout, pullback, and we trade upwards. Perhaps the operation is a little more difficult to understand here, but again I am following the same [15:38] structure, only with a different form. I have two impulse candles, one pullback candle, and I'm looking to trade similarly on the lower end of the traders, the last second of the candle, and [15:51] we have $25 one minute up. So, to conclude the video traders, I don't know if you can see how easy trading can really be if you follow each [16:03] previous video that I sometimes see that my traders, every time they place a different from what I'm doing right now. Instead of looking at all the charts or trying to [16:15] find the chart that follows the same basic structure, the same fundamental way of trading, when I tell you that something is basic, many of you assume that , ah, since something is basic, it's easy, and I'm already a very [16:28] advanced trader. Many times, students who come to my academy tell me, "No, master, I already know what you're explaining. I'm a super advanced trader." Having advanced knowledge of strategies [16:41] doesn't guarantee good results. Believe me, a trader who can achieve results, make a living , and be highly profitable with very basic fundamentals is 1000 times better than someone who says, "This trader has been [16:56] trading for 15 years, has been reading trading books for 15 years, but guess what? They've never made a penny." And there are many traders like that; they know all the books, all the methodologies, but they've never made a penny, never [17:09] withdrawn a single cent in their lives. So, when I say something is basic or has a basic structure, it doesn't mean the level is easy. Sometimes the basics, the simple things, are what work, and that's what you should [17:22] stick with, nothing more. If something works for you, you should replicate it. If the 35 methods you 've learned so far aren't working for you, then it's... Time to go back to the beginning. It's never too late to return to the basics of trading. So let's [17:36] see if we can squeeze in a few last trades, traders. You know, I usually make at least two or three trades per trading session. I'll tell you that I've recently reduced my trading capital because I'm [17:50] changing my routine, moving house, switching projects, starting new things, and I don't want to risk more capital than necessary. I'm a trader who, if I'm not 100% comfortable with the [18:03] trading strategy, prefers to operate with less capital. So, since I'm going through some changes, I don't have my usual routine, and I'm trading with a traders, here's an impulse that's no longer significant, we have a swing zone, here's an [18:18] upward breakout; we'd need a pullback to be able to trade for a minute upwards . This could be a free trade. And what's the magic of this? If the chart touches our entry point, we'd be [18:31] our entry point, we'd be following the same basic pattern of all the trades again. So, traders, sorry to repeat myself so much, but Remember what I'm telling you: the basics are what work most of the [18:43] time. So, I hope you enjoyed this video. Be sure to leave your specific questions in the comments so I can answer them in future videos. Here's a link to my next video . Don't forget to click, and I'll [18:57] . Don't forget to click, and I'll see you in the next one, trader!