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Video Transcript:
And
here’s an example of why the ES might have been a better trade here. See this?
We took out this liquidity here and had the SMT. Then we inversed this fair
value gap. Can anybody tell me the difference between these two fair value gaps
and the possible entries on that? Who can tell me? The break-even point. Yep.
So this one closed below what we call the break-even point. This one didnβt.
And then obviously after that we had a big crash down below. So that, Jason,
would be the occasional time where I might take the ES, even though both of
these patterns are fantastic. Here, the ES is actually the stronger one, but
the setup was better. Thatβs all I like to focus onβone thing I really doβand
thatβs why Iβll always trade the NQ, but I have both.
Can
you elaborate on what you just talked about there? Why would you have chosen ES
in that case again? So, typically when we get into an inverse fair value gap,
okay, we know with great certaintyβnow in this case it was different because we
had targets of liquidity lower, so the conviction that we were going lower was
high anyway. But normally, when we get an inverse fair value gap, we know with
over 90% accuracy that weβre good at least to this pivot low right here. And as
you can see, this is a 15-minute chart. We closed below that pivot low. So
typically when we inverse this fair value gap, when we get to this level and
close below it, this is where we want to go break-even because price should not
just sweep this level. It should really go through it and not come back up. If
price sweeps this level, then itβs just a liquidity grab and itβs going to go
back up, and it wonβt work. Thatβs why we go break-even at this level.
So,
the NQ crossed above and ended below this break-even. The ES didnβt. Thatβs
your entry candle on the ES. Thatβs your entry candle on the NQ. Plain and
simple.
I
see that, but I guess Iβm failing to understand why you think ES was a better
choice on that short. Well, they were both fine, but ES did not close below the
break-even point. NQ did. You canβt enter a trade after it crosses the
break-even point. Here you enter a trade. Once it crosses here, you can now go
break-even on this cross and protect your trade. Here you canβt because it
already crossed the break-even. That invalidates the entry when it does that.
It already came into a recent internal low. Now, on a day like this, we knew
that we were going lower because we wanted to get to this Nvidia data low. That
was the draw in liquidity. But normally, in a normal trade, this is invalidated
because it closed below break-even. ES didnβt. So ES would have been the better
trade. It was the only trade.
Gotcha.
So youβre basically saying you canβt define your risk once you break past that.
Yeah, because once it breaks past hereβyeah, youβre rightβI canβt define my
risk anymore because I know Iβm good to at least here. So when I enter right
here, I enter on the short right here. I know with over 90% accuracy that weβre
at least going to go to that low. So when it hits that low, I can now go to
break-even. And then obviously it was a protected trade the whole way. Here I
canβt do that because the close of the candle that inversed the fair value gap
closed below the break-even point. So I canβt manage my risk here. If this move
was just a liquidity sweep, then this would have jammed me way back higher and
this would have been a loser instead of a break-even. Thatβs the rationale
behind it.
Is
that clear, Crystal?
Hey everyone, itβs Dale here. I hope you enjoyed the video. If youβd like to trade alongside me and our team of prop firm funded traders every day, then click the link below the video and hop aboard. We look forward to trading with you.
