A simple and practical breakdown of 4 entry triggers that consistently appear in real market structure. Clear logic, clean execution, no unnecessary complexity.
🟡 Fading breakout traders
When price breaks a key level and open interest jumps, breakout traders rush in expecting continuation. If price quickly snaps back, those new traders become trapped and their exits fuel a move in the opposite direction. This creates one of the cleanest reversal triggers since you are trading directly against failed momentum.
🟡 Liquidation flushes
Sharp liquidation events create long wicks and temporary price inefficiencies. Markets tend to rebalance after these shocks as liquidity returns, which is why these wicks often get filled quickly. This setup works well in volatile phases and near exhaustion points where forced selling or buying pushes price too far.
🟡 Orderblocks
Orderblocks are zones where previous heavy participation occurred, usually during sideways movements before a strong move away. When price revisits these levels, the same participants often defend the area, creating reliable reaction points. Clean pivots with no messy wicks are the strongest since they signal clear institutional activity.
🟡 London session liquidity setup
London frequently sets the daily low or high early in the session. Later in the day price often returns to sweep internal liquidity around that level before continuing the trend. This repeatable behavior offers structured entries based on predictable liquidity grabs tied to session mechanics.
These 4 triggers work because they exploit trapped traders, forced liquidations and consistent liquidity patterns rather than relying on indicators. Keep them simple, wait for clean context and let the setups come to you.
Everything you do besides your main thing should complement your main thing.
For example: You want to be a trader. You spend your time backtesting, forward testing, live trading, learning etc.
What do you do when you don't work on your trading? Some may have a job or are in school / uni.
Your job or your field of study should complement your trading. Studying Chemistry when you want to become a trader instead of economics/psychology or math could be a waste of energy.
Taking a job that earns you 500 bucks more but requires more attention than a random job where you might earn less but grant you more time on the job to learn trading could be a mistake.
If you don't want to do that because you don't want to change your circumstances too drastically implementing free time activities that complement your trading does an incredible job.
Playing Poker with your friends instead of going out for lunch or watching a video about Psychology instead of Mr. Beast 1 vs whatever goes a long way.
Once you start doing this progress happens by itself.
Decisions compound. And Winners focus on the right decisions every day.
Nothing else bring emotion to the trade, not even if it goes against you.
The only emotions bringer is high leverage 👀
Trust me Bro high leverage is not shortcut.
Use low leverage and margin think of trading as if it's your job:
Most jobs don't pay you more than $1000 per month and yet here you want to make $1000 per trade 🙄
Remember in trading world only 10%-20% and in some research only mentioned 5% traders win to be part of those traders you don't need high leverage, you need:
Guys $AIN is showing strong bullish momentum after long term heavy selling pressure, keep an eye on it we need a healthy pullback first then we can jump in for a long position.
Targeting gradually next resistance levels.
It's also a good place to hold some in spot as it's the bottom and the bulls are just stepping in.
I see some people say long $BARD now, no I think it has already pumped and testing this level.
We can go long only if we get a sustainable breakout here and maintain bullish momentum and then we can enter on a healthy pullback target the area around 1.00