Learn
  • WELCOME TO LEARN
  • 🐔INTRODUCTION TO FINANCIAL MARKETS
    • ▫️All Lessons
      • 🔹Why should you have an Investor mindset?
      • 🔹Financial Markets and its Functions
      • 🔹Financial Markets - Business & Career prospects
  • 📊Advanced Market Analytics (AMA)
    • ▫️All Lessons
      • 🔹Trading Terminal
      • 🔹Charts & Candlesticks
      • 🔹Candlestick Patterns
      • 🔹Price Swings
      • 🔹Wave Patterns & Trend
      • 🔹Patterns
      • 🔹Divergence
      • 🔹Fibonacci Retracement & Extension
      • 🔹Support & Resistance
  • ✨Deeper Study on Advanced Market Analytics
    • ▫️All Lessons
      • 🔹What are charts?
      • 🔹Candlestick Charts in detail
      • 🔹Candlestick Patterns
      • 🔹Fractals & Degrees
      • 🔹Price Swings
      • 🔹Wave Patterns with Motive Wave Rules and Guidelines
      • 🔹Trend
      • 🔹Patterns
      • 🔹Corrective Patterns
      • 🔹Divergence
      • 🔹Fibonacci Retracement
      • 🔹Combining Time Frames
      • 🔹Labelling Waves
      • 🔹Support and Resistance
  • ⚔️Strategies
    • ▫️All Lessons
      • 🔹Entry Condition & Money Management
      • 🔹Top Down Analysis
      • 🔹Strategies with Entry & Exits
      • 🔹Trade Management - Profit Target
  • 📈Elliott Wave Principle
    • ▫️All Lessons
      • 🔹1. Introduction
        • 🔸1.1 The Broad Concept
        • 🔸1.2 Basic Tenets
        • 🔸1.3 Wave Mode
        • 🔸1.4 Essential Design
        • 🔸1.5 Wave Function
        • 🔸1.6 Detailed Analytics
        • 🔸1.7 Corrective Waves
        • 🔸1.8 Additional Terminology (Opition)
      • 🔹2. Motive Waves
        • 🔸2.1 Guidelines Of Wave Formation
        • 🔸2.2 Depth Of Corrective Waves
        • 🔸2.3 Wave Equality
        • 🔸2.4 Volume
        • 🔸Summary Rules And Guidlines For Wave
        • 🔸2.6 Learning The Basics
      • 🔹3. Historical and Mathematical Background of the Wave Principle
        • 🔸3.1 Historical And Mathematical Background Of The Wave Principle
        • 🔸3.2 The Fibonacci Sequence
        • 🔸3.3 The Golden Section
        • 🔸3.4 The Meaning Of Phi
        • 🔸3.5 Fibonacci In The Spiraling Stock Market
        • 🔸3.6 Fibonacci Mathematics In The Structure Of The Wave Principle
      • 🔹4. Elliott Applied
        • 🔸4.1 Ration Analysis And Fibonacci Time Sequences
        • 🔸4.2 Applied Ratio Analysis
        • 🔸4.3 Multiple Wave Relationships
        • 🔸4.4 Benner's Theory
      • 🔹5. Long Term Waves and an Up To-Date Composite
        • 🔸5.1 Long Term Waves And An Up To Date Composite
        • 🔸5.2 Long Term Waves
        • 🔸5.3 The Supercycle Wave From 1932
      • 🔹6. Stocks and Commodities
        • 🔸6.1 Stocks And Commodities
        • 🔸6.2 Commodities
        • 🔸6.3 Gold
      • 🔹7. Other Approaches to the Stock Market & Their Relationship to The Wave Principle
        • 🔸7.1 Their Relationship To The Wave Principle
        • 🔸7.2 Cycles
        • 🔸7.3 Technical Analysis
      • 🔹8. Elliott Speaks
        • 🔸8.1 Elliot Speaks
        • 🔸8.2 Nature's Law
      • 🔹9. Appendix
        • 🔸April 6, 1983 (Continued)
        • 🔸April 6, 1983
        • 🔸August 18, 1983
        • 🔸Double Three Correction Ending in August 1982
        • 🔸January 1982
        • 🔸Long Term Forecast Update 1982 1983
        • 🔸October 6, 1982
        • 🔸September 13, 1982
      • 🔹10. Glossary
        • 🔸Glossary Of Terms
    • Related Videos
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  • Strategies
  • 1. Higher time frame and lower time frame candle entry
  • 2. Triple top and Triple bottom
  • 3. Candlestick pattern entry
  • 4. Fib-level entry
  • 5. High probability setups
  • 6. Trading Break Outs
  • Take Profit

Was this helpful?

  1. Strategies
  2. All Lessons

Strategies with Entry & Exits

PreviousTop Down AnalysisNextTrade Management - Profit Target

Last updated 2 years ago

Was this helpful?

Strategies

1. Higher time frame and lower time frame candle entry

Buy signals

  1. Know your weekly support and resistance areas

  2. Bull candle engulfing or piercing or a strong bull-bodied candle on a Daily time frame

  3. Mark the daily candle high and low with a horizontal line visible in H1 time frame

  4. Look for the buy trigger on H1 within the horizontal lines zone

  5. Trigger: H1 bull candle has a higher high and higher low than its previous candle, super trend indicator in green color.6.Enter at break of the high of the H1 bull candle.

  6. Put stop loss at the low of the H1 entry candle.

  7. Daily candles should not come at a weekly resistance

  8. Target 1:3 risk-reward, set stop loss at breakeven upon 1:1

use the supertrend indicator

Sell signal

  1. Know your weekly support and resistance areas

  2. Bear candle engulfing or piercing or a strong bear bodied candle on Daily time frame

  3. Mark the daily candle high and low with horizontal line visible in H1 time frame

  4. Look for sell trigger on H1 within the horizontal lines zone

  5. Trigger: H1 bear candle having lower high and lower low than its previous candle, super trend indicator in red color.

  6. Enter at break of low of the H1 bear candle. Put stop loss at the high of the H1 entry candle. Daily candle should not come at a weekly resistance

  7. Target 1:3 risk reward, set stop loss at breakeven upon 1:1

2. Triple top and Triple bottom

Real Chart Example:

Triple bottom

Real Chart Example :

3. Candlestick pattern entry

Engulfing pattern

  1. After top-down analysis look for candlestick patterns at entry level

  2. If the structure belongs to h4, look for engulfing candlestick pattern on H1.

  3. Take profit 1:1 or 1:2

Pin bar pattern

  • Comprises of two segments, the “wick” portion and the “body” of the candlestick. Ideally, we want the body to be small relative to the size of the wick by almost 3 times.

  • The height of the whole of the pin bar candlestick should be more than the height of its previous candle

  • Entry: if the structure belongs to H4 look for pin bar in the same time.

4. Fib-level entry

  • Mark the 61% and 78% levels of the 1st impulse on entry time frame after top down analysis.

  • Apply strategy 4 on H1 once the price reaches any of these fib level.

OR

  • Enter at the fib level price

  • Stop loss is 1 pip below the start of the impulsive wave that is fibbed in case of buy entry and 1 pip above the start of the impulsive wave in case of sell entry.

5. High probability setups

correction within correction

6. Trading Break Outs

  1. Entry is made when a possible impulse, preceded by a correction of the 1st Impulse, crosses the end of the 1st impulse.

  2. Break-out entry is done if you are expecting a reversal of the ongoing trend or correction of a bigger degree or when you do not get an entry as per strategy 4 (price didn’t go to the expected fib level).

Another demonstration of Breakout entry.

Stop loss can be 1 or 2 as shown below depending upon your profit target. Stop loss can be 1 or 2 as shown below depending upon your profit target.

Take Profit

  1. Profit levels can be technical and non-technical, unlike the stop loss level which needs to be technical.

  2. Non-technical: as per risk reward

  3. Technical: for a bigger degree structure with entry set up on h1, the profit target can 1:3/4. Or until the time there is a trendline line break and last swing low/high break on h1.

  4. Trailing stop loss to breakeven for a bigger degree structure entry.

  5. Scaling out: you can think of adding one more trade while your first one is running and stop loss is put to breakeven so that the risk on the new trade is the same as the risk you took earlier for the first trade and now your overall risk is same as you took for first trade but you have two trade so your risk: reward becomes 1:4 if it was 1:2 earlier.

⚔️
▫️
🔹
Skill to make money will always be in demandpoolsifi
Logo