Trading Ideas
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Understanding market structure in trading
Market structure explains how price moves, showing trends and structure to help traders understand current behaviour and future market direction.
Identifying overtrading and how to avoid it
Overtrading happens when traders place too many unplanned trades, which slowly drains account equity and weakens emotional control and long-term discipline.
The basics of Elliott wave theory in trading
Elliott wave theory describes how price action follows structured wave patterns reflecting investor psychology across multiple market timeframes.
Price slippage in trading and its impact on execution
Slippage happens when trade execution differs from the expected price, impacting results positively or negatively depending on market volatility.
Fear and Greed Index: its role in trading psychology
Market moves reflect emotion, with fear and greed shaping decisions. The Fear and Greed Index helps traders track sentiment and market mood.
How to build a gold trading strategy
Trading gold demands precision, market knowledge and statistical discipline due to its strong correlations across major financial markets.
Discount & premium zones in ICT trading
In ICT methodology, price doesn’t move randomly, it constantly rotates between areas where smart money is willing to buy (discount), and areas where they prefer to sell or even take profit (premium). Today I will explain how these zones are created and why price reacts to them, your chart becomes clearer, and your entries become more reliable.
Trading psychology: do emotional reactions drive your trade choices?
Traders blame their strategy when things go wrong, change indicators, switch timeframes, or jump to a new method. But the truth is much simpler on the same hand, much harder to accept.
MSS vs BOS: essential guidance for mastering market structure
Market Structure Shift (MSS) and Break of Structure (BOS) are two of the most important concepts in ICT trading. MSS signals a potential reversal in the market directions, however the BOS confirms continuation of the existing trend and the trend that we had the signal from the MSS. These structural tools provide ICT traders with precise entry points, clear bias and a deeper understanding of price delivery. This article will explain how they appear in the Bullish and Bearish conditions.
Fair Value Gap (FVG): essential guide for ICT traders
In ICT methodology, one of the most powerful and frequently used concepts is the fair value gap (FVG). It represents an imbalance in price action, a moment when the market moves too quickly in one direction, leaving behind inefficiency and unfilled liquidity that price often returns to rebalance. Understanding how FVGs work is essential for identifying high-probability entries, predicting retracements, and reading institutional order flow.