Tag Archive for: price action setup

This week I want to share a few price action trade setups from one of my students, along with some of my personal live trades. Although I had several trades that were highly profitable, my student actually had some really impressive trades, so he’ll get the top nod for the week.
Here they are below, including one I just completed less than a few hours ago.

Live Trade Setup #1: EURGBP +130 Pips
eurgbp live price action trade 2ndskiesforex 30m chart oct 15

This is one of my personal live price action trades on the EURGBP. On October 13th, in the private member trade setups commentary, I told the members that I was flipping from short to long on the EURGBP, and suggested looking for a pullback between 7908 and 7890.
The pair pulled back to 7908, and as you can see from the chart above, this was an excellent trade location as the trade literally never went negative.
My entry was based on corrective pullback anticipating the trend would continue (not a price action signal or pattern), with me entering mid candle as price hit my limit order.
Literally just a couple hours ago, I took profit, and this seems like the prudent move as the pair has since sold off from the highs.
Total profit was +130 pips with a 28 pip stop, for a +4.65R profit in less than 1.5 days.

Live Trade Setup #2: Dax Trade Profits +3.5R
live trade setups 2ndskiesforex dax

This trade comes from a student, who probably like you, has been struggling with their trading. Right away, he got to work, training hard with our course strategies and lessons.
The result is his performance now taking a seriously good turn as of late.
In this trade above, you can see his trade entry, stop loss and take profit. He was viewing the corrective pullback + double top as a great opportunity to trade with the trend.
He targeted the bottom of the range, which was a prudent move as the index bounced heavily, grabbing +3.5R in less than 2 hours.
NOTE: We’ll discuss his other highly profitable trade shortly, which he made just a few hours earlier.

Live Trade Setup #3: $CAD +170 Pips & +3.77R
usdcad live price action trade 4hr chart 2ndskiesforex oct 14

On October 7th in our daily member trade setups commentary, we suggested looking to buy the USDCAD between 1.1120 and 1.1070 to get long and trade with the trend.
Looking at the chart above, we traded this play, buying at 1.1100 with a stop at 1.1051 and a targeting the prior resistance at 1.1270 for +170 pips and +3.77R.
Had you been looking for a price action setup, you would have missed this trade completely. Food for thought.

Live Trade Setup #4: 2nd Dax Trade for +8R!
live price action trade 5Min DAX 8R

Remember that student who had the +3.5R trade on the Dax we showed earlier? Well this is the trade that came just hours before.
Trading off the 5 minute intra-day chart, this student spotted a good with trend trade following a corrective pullback.
Selling just below 8957, he literally called the top of the day (within a few points), grabbing +140 points on a 17 point stop for an amazing +8R in 2 hours!
Hence between those two trades, he put +11.5R of profits in his account within 4.5 hours, all using the 5 minute chart.

In Closing

As you can see, we don’t just give vague trade recommendations about what the market ‘might do from here‘, or occasional trade ideas 3-4x per month. We actively trade the markets, sharing many of our live price action setups (and give more in-depth commentary to our private members).
Also by now, you should clearly see the power of learning to trade price action beyond your ordinary price action signals (which would have missed all these trades).
If you’d like to learn more about becoming a member and making profitable trades just like the above, click here.

Today I am writing a potent article about pre-qualifying forex breakouts, particularly understanding them from a price action & order flow perspective.  When you pre-qualify a breakout, you put yourself in a position to identify it as a high or low probability breakout. To do this however, you have to understand what makes a successful forex breakout trade both from a price action and order flow perspective.

In my prior article 3 Keys for Identifying Breakouts, I talk about 3 such parameters for pre-qualifying forex breakouts.  They are;

1) Well Defined Support/Resistance Level

2) Pre-Breakout Squeeze/Pressure/Tension

3) 20ema Carry

When you can identify these prior to a potential breakout, you highly increase the probabilities of trading a successful breakout. But let’s dig into this a little deeper as to why from a price action and order flow perspective.

Order Flow Behind Breakouts
From an order flow perspective, breakouts generally start with an initial balance between buyers and sellers.  This usually results in a range of sorts, with two clearly defined support and resistance levels. When you get several touches on these levels, this clearly communicates where both sides of the players are parked (and likely their stops as well).  The more touches on these barriers, the more players are brought in.

Those who are bullish will get in on the bounces off support, while bearish players on rejections off resistance.

However as time goes on, tension starts to build between the two camps as someone will eventually want to take control. In almost all cases, the side with the largest number of orders and money behind their camp, will win this tug of war.

This usually manifests in a higher low (HL) or lower high (LH) being formed inside the range, and more aggressive pushes towards the other line in the sand, while less or no touches on the other side, almost as if the sellers or buyers could not reach the other support or resistance level.  It usually looks something like the chart below.

EURJPY 5M Chart
price action breakouts and order flow chris capre 2ndskiestrading.com eurjpy

Looking at the chart above, you’ll see a clearly defined support and resistance level with a minimum of two touches on each side. This tips us off to where the bears and bulls are parked on the chart with stops just above/below the levels.

Now you will notice each rejection at A & B minimally went up to 125.05 before coming back down and touching the same support level at 124.80.

C pushes price back up to 125.05, but this time the rejection fails to reach 124.80, and can only make it to 124.85.  From an order flow perspective, the buyers are starting to get more aggressive and confident their level will hold, so they are buying up higher (at a more expensive price).

The next pullback at E is also higher, so we are seeing a continual change of hands by the bulls buying higher from support (and their defenses at 124.80).

Now notice every push up from B, C, D, and E only makes it to a maximum price of 125.05.  But with F, it goes to 125.10. There were probably some intraday bears shorting at 125.05 (now stopped out), while the rest were still short at 125.15.

Now that price is pushing up towards the resistance without ever touching the support, this communicates the bulls are taking control of the price action with more orders and money, and will likely continue to squeeze the bears out.

This price action squeeze takes out smart sellers early as they recognize they are about to get stopped out if they stay in. The slower players stay in until they are at breakeven, while the slowest and most stubborn bears stay in till they are stopped out.

EURJPY 5M Breakout Chart
price action breakouts and order flow chris capre 2ndskiestrading.com eurjpy 5m breakout chart

Using the chart above, we see the final stage of the breakout which is the 20ema carry in Box A.  This “20ema carry” is a common price action formation prior to a good breakout, as it shows;

a) the mathematical representation of price gaining

and

b) gives bulls who haven’t entered a chance to get in prior to the breakout

This is followed by a strong breakout bar at B. This large bar should be curious, for why would bulls buy up so strongly heading into a resistance level if they were worried about sellers parked there.  Usually, institutional traders can smell an upcoming breakout like this, so will push really hard to take out any stops as they go after the barrier.

A “strong breakout bar” is usually a really good sign the breakout will continue as it means stops were tripped above the resistance level, and price jumped aggressively in one bar.  More ideal is if it has a good “clearing distance“, for if it does, then it increases the chances all the stops were tripped by going further away from the resistance level where most of the stops were near.

Tripping The Stops
It is this latter part – the stops getting tripped, which helps fuel the breakout even further, because those bears who were short now have to buy back, and this buying back to exit out helps further fuel the upside breakout. This is why if you ever watch the prices on your actual platform during a breakout like this, it generally reads (using 4 decimal places);

1.2999
1.3000
1.3001
1.3002
1.3003 (stops tripped)
1.3006!

You can always tell where the stops were parked and tripped, because price then jumps a few pips in a shot. The reason for this is – there were no sellers between 1.3003 and 1.3006, meaning the brokers could not print a price there since there were not enough orders there to hold that price. The stops being tripped at 1.3003 were sellers who now had to buy back, and when they did, they helped to push the next market price up 3 pips in a single tick or print.

When you see this, it usually means the breakout will likely continue – as long as you have done your pre-qualifying ahead of time.

One Final Note
Like all things, we have to pre-qualify a forex breakout using several price action characteristics ahead of time. The ones listed above are just a few of the ones we use in my Course, and there are several others which will clue you off and enhance the probability of the breakout being successful or not.

When you can pre-qualify them correctly, you will find breakouts quite easy to trade and accuracy levels around 60-70% as this is what my more profitable students are doing consistently just trading breakouts.

But, you have to pre-qualify them, like any price action setup.  We never just trade them in isolation, as we are not pattern traders. We are price action traders, and we always trade setups & price action in context.

Any good system can perform badly without the proper context. Pin bars can be a highly effective system, if traded in context. But without understanding the type of trend, or volatility levels, you will likely lose money trading pin bars in isolation, even if you trade them at key chart levels.

Thus, we are never just trading patterns on a chart. We are always trading them in context, and this is exactly the same for breakouts, so always pre-qualify them ahead of time.

Look for the three characteristics above, try to trade them with trend more often then counter-trend, and you’ll find they can offer highly profitable trades, with some of the better reward to risk ratios out there, such as 3, 4, 5, or many reaching 7 or 9:1 reward to risk ratios.