1. Liquidity

Buy-side liquidity represents buy stop orders placed above significant resistance levels.

Sell-side liquidity consists of sell stop orders located below key support levels.

1.1 Liquidity

Buy-side liquidity represents buy stop orders placed above significant resistance levels.

Sell-side liquidity consists of sell stop orders located below key support levels.

1.2 Price Void

Liquidity void is a market imbalance that occurs when the price moves quickly in one direction, leaving price levels where no trading has occurred due to the absence of opposing orders.

These areas often act as magnets that attract the price to return to them and cover them later.

1.3 Price Gaps

Price gaps are voids in price movement, often appearing on the chart as sharp movements up or down without significant trading volume or clear participation.

These gaps can appear in any market and across different time frames.

1.4 Price Displacement

Price displacement is a strong price movement resulting from large buying or selling pressure.

Often appears as a single candle or a group of candles all moving in the same direction.

1.5 Ideal Entry Points

They represent the best places to enter a trade, and can be identified using the Fibonacci tool.

They are often between the 61.8% and 78.6% levels of a price expansion correction.

1.6 Accumulation Areas

Look for accumulation areas above resistance (buy-side liquidity) or below support (sell-side liquidity).

These areas are often filled with stop-loss orders, and they are clear as peaks and troughs.

1.7 Review of Concepts

This is a description and uses of many concepts that I recently explained.

Take a screenshot and study it well, as these are concepts you should know and practice.

2. Market Structure

A bearish market structure appears when the price begins to decline from the peak on the left side of the chart, forming a series of lower highs (LH) and lower lows (LL).

As for the market structure shift (MSS), it begins to form after a change in market structure, appearing as a series of higher highs (HH) and higher lows (HL).

2.1 Understanding Trends

The chart illustrates the movements of the larger frame (black) above the movements of the smaller frame (gray).

Gray against black = temporary correction, gray with black = trend resumption.

2.2 Time Frame Alignment

The 4H frame changes its structure and begins a correction, led by the M15 frame after it shifts to a downtrend.

When the price reaches a discount area, M15 returns to rise, then M1, aligning the time frames with the upward trend again.

2.3 Swing Highs and Lows

Swing highs act as resistance, and it may be difficult for the price to break through them when returning.

Swing lows are points to which the price drops before starting to rise.

2.4 Structure Change and Break

Market structure change (MSS) indicates the potential for a trend reversal when the price breaks a key low or peak without confirmation of the previous structure.

A break of structure (BOS) occurs when the price surpasses a peak or breaks a low in a clear direction.

2.5 The Difference Between BOS and MSS

BOS focuses on clear breakouts of support or resistance levels.

MSS indicates a broader change in trend, not just a single breakout.

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