Full Guide to Forex Trading for Beginners 2024

Introduction to Forex Trading 

Forex Trading can get you results like 100$, 1000$, or 10,000$ in 1 hour or less per day from anywhere in the world. The best thing is you can make these profits trading hundreds of thousands of dollars of someone else's money without taking on any risk yourself. 

Once mastered, trading can give you more time, location, and financial freedom than any other career path that I can think of. In this full course, I'm going to show you absolutely everything you need to know to start a profitable trading career. You don't need to have any experience to read this post. I'm going to take you through the whole process, from introducing you to the basics of Forex all the way through to taking your first profitable trade. 

In case you're wondering who I am, why you should listen to me, and how I have any authority on this subject, I've been trading for 7 years and I've built a full-time trading career for myself. Over the past 2 years, I've trained over 2,000 people just like you to achieve $21 million in combined results. Many of those people are now making over $10,000 per month, and many of them have also gone full-time with their trading. 


Let's get into the lessons. 

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What is Forex? 

First off, what is Forex? 

Well, Forex is an abbreviation for foreign exchange. Foreign exchange is a giant global market where the value of the world's currencies is traded against one another. 

It's kind of like stocks, but instead of buying and selling shares in companies, we are trading the value of different currencies. Every single day, $7 trillion passes hands in this market, making it by far the biggest. 

When Can You Trade Forex? 

It's also the second most flexible market behind cryptocurrency. 

Forex markets are open 24 hours a day, 5 days a week, meaning you can take a trade at literally any time except the weekend. Stock markets, options, and futures markets don't have this benefit; they have specific trading hours that you are confined to. 

But Forex markets don't have this constraint. You can literally take a trade anytime you want between 10:00 p.m. GMT on Sunday and 10:00 p.m. GMT on Friday. Of course, on Saturday and Sunday, the market is closed. 

What Do We Trade? 

So, what do we trade? 

Well, you know that we're trading the value of different currencies, but we don't actually buy physical currency. In Forex, we trade contracts, and these contracts are called currency pairs. They show the value of one currency against another. 

An example of a currency pair is EUR/USD, which is the Euro versus the US Dollar. There are hundreds of different currency pairs available to trade, covering all of the world's global currencies, broken down into three main segments: major currency pairs, minor currency pairs, and exotic currency pairs. 

Major pairs cover the world's most important currencies and always include the US Dollar. 

For example: 

  • EUR/USD, which is the Euro versus the Dollar 
  • GBP/USD, which is the Great British Pound versus the US Dollar 
  • USD/JPY, which is the Dollar versus the Japanese Yen 
  • NZD/USD, which is the New Zealand Dollar versus the US Dollar 

Minor pairs cover the world's most important currencies but disregard the US Dollar. There are many of these, but a few examples would be: 

  • EUR/GBP, which is the Euro versus the Great British Pound 
  • NZD/JPY, which is the New Zealand Dollar versus the Japanese Yen
  • CAD/CHF, which is the Canadian Dollar versus the Swiss Franc 

At the bottom segment, we have exotic currency pairs. These are currency pairs made up of one very popular, important currency and an emerging market currency. An example would be USD/MXN, which is the Dollar versus the Mexican Peso. 

For the most part, you should trade major pairs. They have the most people trading them, there's the most money flowing around, and they give you the best trading conditions. Minor pairs are okay, but major pairs are better, and exotics have terrible conditions—I wouldn't even bother looking at those. 

So, back to EUR/USD. Currency pairs are made up of a base currency and a quote currency. The base currency is always the first currency listed in the pair. The quote currency is always the second currency in the pair. The base and the quote make up the price of the currency pair. 

For example, looking at the price of EUR/USD, we can see the price is 1.08538. This simply means that 1 Euro is worth 1.08538. To make money trading, we need the price to go up after we buy at that level. If you bought at 1.08538 and the market went up to 1.09538, you would make money.

Another benefit of trading Forex over different markets is that because we're buying contracts, we can actually trade both ways. If you buy a stock and the stock goes down, you lose money because the shares you own are worth less. However, in Forex, with the contracts, we're essentially just betting on whether the market is going to go up or down, which means we can actually sell the market and profit when the market goes down. 

Some terms that you need to know in relation to this are long and short, bullish and bearish. 

Bullish and Bearish 

So, what's bullish? 

Well, bullish is a term for a market that's going up. It's also the term people use to describe their bias if they think the market is going to go up. So, if EUR/USD is bullish, that means EUR/USD is going up. If someone says they're bullish on EUR/USD, that doesn't necessarily mean that EUR/USD is going up right now, but they think that it is going to go up. 

And what's bearish? 

Bearish is the opposite of bullish. Bearish describes a falling market or a bias if you think the market is going to fall. So, if EUR/USD is bearish, that means EUR/USD is going down. If someone says they are bearish on a market, that means they think that market is going to go down. 

What's long? 

Long is another word for buy. A long position is a buy trade. So, if a trader thinks a market is going to go up, they would enter a long position. They might say they're long on EUR/USD. 

And short is the opposite. 

Short is another word for sell. So, if someone says they're entering a short position, that means they think the market is going to go down, and they're betting on a sell. 

So, long and bullish mean buy, and short and bearish mean sell. 

How can I make money trading? 

Money is made by accurately forecasting which way the currency pairs are going to move and then buying or selling, or going long or short, in that direction. If you think the Euro is going to get stronger against the US Dollar for the next 10 minutes, 10 hours, 10 days, or any time frame you want, you would go long or buy EUR/USD. 

Flexible Trading Styles 

If you think the Euro is going to get weaker, then you would sell EUR/USD. The cool thing about Forex is that you can trade across practically any time scale. You could decide to get in and out of the market in 1 to 2 minutes, or you could hold a trade for a year or more if you really wanted to. 

These different styles of trading over different time frames have different names: scalping, day trading, swing trading, and position trading. 

Scalping is trading where you get in and out of a market in a matter of seconds or a few minutes, looking to catch very small price moves. 

Day trading is where you get into a trade with the plan to get out in the next few hours or within the same day that you entered the trade. 

Swing trading is where we go for slightly bigger moves, holding a trade from anywhere from 3 days to a few weeks. 

Position trading is where we hold trades from months to years. 

The most common forms of trading are day trading and swing trading. The style of trading I recommend you start out with is swing trading, simply because this is the easiest and most passive way to trade.

If you are currently working a 9-to-5 job or have commitments that take up a lot of your day, you can swing trade around those with no problems. It's also the easiest to master and can bring you significant profits. All you do is find a trade, get in, and then let it run for a few days to a few weeks. It will literally work for you and make you a few thousand dollars in the background.

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Trends 

To make money, essentially all we need to do is find a market that's trending either up or down and then get into a trade.

To clarify, a trend is simply a phase in the market where we're either going up or down, but not sideways. 

Because Forex is so flexible, you don't have to bet on a trade for months or years. You can get into a buy trade while it's going up, and if the market starts to reverse, you simply get out, go short, and profit from the down move as well. 

What is a Pip? 

Now, what is a pip? 

We measure the price move that the market makes in pips. The currency quote I showed you before is made up of pips, and that's the price for a currency pair. 

For EUR/USD at 1.08538, the '3' is one pip, the '5' is 10 pips, the '8' is 100 pips, and the '0' would be 1,000 pips. 

You might notice that we leave off the final number—the small red one you saw on the quote. That's a fraction of a pip. 

When we're counting pips, we start with the one number from the left, always ignoring the fraction. Counting pips becomes important when preparing trades and managing risk, and we will cover this in depth shortly. So, don’t worry if it seems a bit confusing right now. 

Technical Analysis and Fundamental Analysis 

Now, I'll show you some live examples. 

What is technical analysis? When it comes to forecasting the markets to find actual trades, we need to do analysis. There are two key types of analysis we can use.

The first is technical analysis. This is what I recommend you begin with. It's the most common form of analysis most traders use, and it's the easiest to grasp and master. Technical analysis involves using price charts to determine where the market is likely to go next by analyzing patterns within the charts. I'm going to show you my strategy in a bit so you can start learning from that. 

The second form of analysis is fundamental analysis

So, what is fundamental analysis? This is where we use politics, economics, real-world events, as well as news and data, to figure out where the markets are going to go. Fundamental analysis is not essential; it can be useful but is not crucial. As a beginner trader, I would recommend you don’t focus on this just yet, as it’s more likely to confuse you than help you. 

For now, keep your focus on technical analysis and the live trades we’ll cover shortly. 

Risk Management 

What is risk management? 

Well, because we are essentially betting on the direction of a currency, sometimes we are guaranteed to be wrong. In fact, most great traders are wrong half of the time. This means if you took 10 trades, you could expect to win five and lose five. Trading success actually comes from balancing the wins and the losses, not getting rid of losses altogether, because that is impossible. 

Since we know we're going to lose a good portion of the trades we take, we have to use what we call risk management. Risk management includes strategies like taking trades that aren't too big and aren't too small, and being prepared to cut losing trades while they're small, while holding our winning trades until the profits become very big. 

Now you know the basics of trading. There are three things that you are going to need to get started: a broker, chart software, and a trading account. 

Brokers 

So, what is a broker? 

A broker is simply a middleman between us, the traders, and the commercial banks that facilitate our trades. When we take a trade, the majority of the time, this trade is handled by a bank. However, we don't go directly to the bank because it is too difficult, time-consuming, and generally not allowed unless we are high-net-worth individuals or licensed with them in some way. 

Instead, we place trades through an account with a broker. The broker instantly executes it and handles everything for us. A broker is absolutely essential; if you don't have a broker, you can't even place a trade. 

It's important that you pick a good broker because many of them are shady. I've heard terrible stories of brokers refusing withdrawals of the money that you've deposited with them. Also, bad brokers will charge you huge fees and commissions, eating into all of the profits you make. 

If you want a good broker, I've been using the same one throughout my whole seven-year trading journey and have never had a single issue. I suggest you use icmarkets broker. 

Spread Explained 

Brokers make money in two ways: through spreads and commissions. 

So, what is spread? 

Now, listen up because this is important and it will cost you dearly if you don't understand it. Spread is the difference between the buying price and the selling price that your broker offers. 

On your trading account, you will see two different prices for a currency pair. These are called a bid price and an ask price. The bid price is the price that the broker is willing to pay for an asset, and the ask price is the price that the dealer is willing to sell the currency pair at. The bid price is always going to be slightly lower than the ask price. 

The broker charges you a small premium to buy a currency pair, and they won't buy it back for as much as they sold it to you. Usually, the spread is only one or two pips, and this is totally fine. However, the spread will eat into the profits on every trade you take. 

So, make sure you're working with a good broker like the one I recommended so that you don't get chewed up by spreads. 

What is Commission? 

Now, the second way that brokers make money is through commissions. Commission is a fixed fee that brokers will charge you for getting in and out of trades. 

Commissions aren't charged on every trading account, though. I actually prefer accounts that do have commissions because generally, accounts that charge a commission are going to have lower spreads. 

So really, you can pick which one you want to pay. You can either pay commissions or pay higher spreads for the trades you take. For me, commissions make the most sense. But you don't need to worry because if you become a good trader, commissions and spreads are cheap enough to be offset by your profits anyway. So, it's not really a big deal. 

What is a Lot Size? 

When you take a trade, you'll have to choose a lot size to enter that trade. A lot size is simply the size of the trade you want to get into, or the number of units that you want to buy. 

A standard lot is 1.0, and this trade is equivalent to buying $100,000 worth of an asset. To trade this big, you'll need an account balance of around $10,000 or more. When you're starting out, you'll most likely be trading micro lots, such as 0.1 or 0.05. 

The smaller your lot size, the less money you can make, but also the less money you can lose. If you trade very large lot sizes, you can make money very quickly, but you can also lose thousands of dollars in a matter of minutes. It's best to start out small and work your way up over time, always following risk management. 

How do you know what lot size you should use on a trade? Well, that's very simple. We can actually be lazy and kind of cheat the system by using a lot size calculator. There are many out there; I like the one on MyFXBook. You simply type in how many pips you want to risk, how much money is in your trading account, and it will tell you exactly how big your trade should be. 

What is Leverage? 

Leverage is money that you borrow from your broker to open trades. The smallest possible trade that you can open with a broker is 0.01 lots, and this is equivalent to $1,000. This means to open this trade without using any leverage, you would need $1,000 in your account. The maximum you could really make off this trade is one, two, maybe three, or four dollars. 

In order to make a lot of money and make a living without any leverage, you would need to be risking and trading with millions of dollars. To get around this, forex brokers build leverage into the accounts.

Leverage is seen as a ratio, a number like 1:10. Leverage will vary from around 1:10 all the way through to 1:1,000, which is pure insanity. 

1:10 leverage means you can take trades with 10 times the buying power of your trading account. 1:100 means you can take trades with 100 times the buying power. In my opinion, there's no reason to ever go above 1:50 leverage, as all you're able to do with huge leverage like 1:200, 1:500, or 1:1,000 is risk way more money than you're supposed to. If you're following risk management, is absolutely pointless, and you never want to do it. 

1:20, 1:30, and 1:50 is the perfect amount of leverage to use. Don't worry, leverage isn't a line of credit. There are no interest loans or penalties for using it. It's simply a natural tool that's built into every forex account. If a broker thinks you're going to lose all your money, they will just close your trades automatically, so you won't end up in debt with them. 

Don't be scared off by leverage; it's a useful tool and it's practically essential for forex trading. 

What is Margin? 

When you invest money in a trading account, that money is used as margin. So if you put $10,000 into a trading account with 1:30 leverage, you'll have $300,000 worth of buying power, meaning you could open up to three lots. But your margin will still be $10,000, so the broker would not let a loss exceed $10,000. If they thought that was going to happen, they would give you a margin call. This is a notification telling you to put more money into your trading account or they’re going to start closing your positions. 

As I say, you never want to get into this position. Your goal should be to never see a margin call in your entire trading career. The only way you see a margin call is if you do something stupid and risk and lose all your money. So, stick to risk management and you'll have no problem. 

Setting Up a Trading Account 

So now that you understand brokers, you need to set up a trading account. You have two options: demo or live. To begin with, you might want to use a demo account. This is a practice account with fake money, so you can't make money but you can't lose money either. You can trade as if you're trading with real money and learn the skill without risking anything. 

A live account is a real money account. This is where you risk real money to make real money in the markets. When you're profitable on demo, you can transition into a live account. Just head to the broker's website and set up your demo or live account, and then you'll nearly be ready to trade.

MetaTrader 5 

When you open a broker account, you can't actually execute trades on the broker's website. You need a trading platform for this. I suggest you use MetaTrader 5. So what you want to do is go to the App Store on your phone, type in MetaTrader 5, download that, open up the app, and then you'll be able to log into your trading account using the account credentials you got when you made an account with your broker.

Different Market Orders 

And just like that, you have an active account to start trading with. Now, there are five different ways that you can actually get into a trade: 

  1. Market Execution: This is a trade where you simply click the buy or sell button, and you're immediately triggered into the market. This is a super common way to get into trades and it's the only way to immediately enter a trade. 
  2. Buy Limit: A buy limit is an order that will trigger a buy trade if the price falls to that level. So, if the price is here and your buy limit is here, if the market comes down to this level, you'll be triggered into a buy. If the market reverses, you will then make a profit. 
  3. Buy Stop: This order is placed above the price, and if the market pushes up to this level, it will trigger into a buy. If the market keeps going, you profit. 
  4. Sell Limit: The sell limit is placed above the price, and if the price gets up to here, that will trigger you into a sell. 
  5. Sell Stop: This is placed below the price, and if the market falls through that level, it will trigger. If it continues moving, you will profit. 

These different entry orders have different uses in the real market. You might not use all of them yourself, or you might, but you'll see how a couple of these work when we do the live examples in a bit.

Stop Loss Orders 

What is a stop loss? 

A stop loss is another kind of order, and these ones are really important. You want to have these on every trade. Remember before I said you can't win every trade and you're going to want to cut your losers as fast as possible? Well, that's what a stop loss is. It's an order that will automatically close your trade at a loss if the market gets to that price level. A stop loss is great to have on every trade as it will automatically get you out, and it means you don't have to sit and stare at the chart while you're running a position. You need a stop loss on every trade to adhere to risk management. 

Take Profit 

Don't forget that. What's a take profit? Well, a take profit is the opposite of a stop loss. Here's an example: your entry is here, your stop loss is here, and your take profit is here. If the price goes down to the stop loss, you'll be closed out for a $1,000 loss. If the price goes up to here, you'll be closed out for $5,000 in profit. Using stop loss and take profit orders is how we do that risk management and ensure we win long term. We can set the take profits to close our trades when they work out, and we can set the stop losses to close our trades when they don't work out, so we don't take a big loss. 

Risk vs. Reward 

We want to use a strategy called risk versus reward. This simply means looking to win more on winning trades than we lose on losing trades. So, you might have your stop loss $1,000 away, but your take profit would be $3,000 or $4,000 away from where we are. That way, if the trade works, you're going to make three or four times what you lose when a trade goes bad. So, going back to the example: if you take 10 trades, you win five and lose five. You're going to lose $5,000 across the five losses, but you'll win $15,000 or more across the five wins, therefore leaving you with a net profit of around $10,000 or more. 

How Much Money Do You Need? 

So, how much money do you need to trade with to make a living from trading? You need upwards of $50,000 or $100,000. Generally, the more the better, and for most people, getting this kind of money together is literally impossible. 

Prop Firms Explained 

But this is where prop firms come in. So, what is a prop firm? A prop firm is a company that will give you access to $100,000, $200,000, $500,000, or maybe even $1 million to trade with if you can prove you can trade. 

You go through an evaluation process where you trade with fake money and you just have to make a small profit without breaking drawdown limits. If you can do this, they will give you the account, and then you can trade $100,000 or more and keep 80 to 90% of the profits that you make. 

Getting involved with prop firms is super cheap. It will cost you around $400 to $500 to get access to a $100,000 account, and this makes it one of the biggest opportunities in modern trading. Prop firms are what many of my students have used to start making $10,000 per month and even more because you don't need a lot of money to invest, and you don't have to risk your own capital to make five-figure returns. 

If you want to learn more about prop firms and the opportunities they provide, click the "10K per month". That's going to take you to a post explaining this opportunity and how you can leverage it to build a career. 

So, now you understand the basics of trading, and you've got your broker account and trading accounts set up. 

Trading Psychology 

But first, trading psychology. Believe it or not, psychology is incredibly important to your trading success. Trading is about building a set of rules and then following that set of rules to continually pull money out of the markets. But the problem is, in a game like trading, where we can lose or make thousands of dollars in just a matter of minutes, emotions run wild, and it's easy to get led into bad decisions by the stress or excitement of winning or losing thousands of dollars very quickly. 

Let me ask you this: Have you ever made $5,000 in 5 minutes? For most of you, the answer will be no. But you can probably imagine how that might make you feel. It can make you feel invincible, and then you start getting cocky and greedy, which leads you to make bad decisions because you feel untouchable. In many cases, traders will make $5,000 and then lose it just as quickly. 

Likewise, have you ever lost $1,000 in 1 minute? Hopefully not, but entering the world of trading, this will become the norm, even if you're trading with someone else's money. This loss can cause you to get angry and frustrated and try to get that money back, which leads to, once again, bad decisions and bigger losses. 

These bad decisions made as a result of poor psychology are the downfall of 90% of traders. Once you master a trading system, there's really not a whole lot more to learn. The only thing you need to do from that point is master your mind. The traders who do master their mind end up winning, but the traders who don't are doomed to fail forever. Never underestimate the importance of a calm and controlled mind when you're trading. 

I've got a bunch of posts on my website that can teach you all about trading psychology. There's even a category called "Psychology", so head over there and read some of those after this post so that you can start thinking like a professional trader. 

Live Trade Examples 

Now, I'm going to start running you through some live trades that I took in the Forex markets. I sent all of these trades to my community, called them in real time, and took them myself. So, these are real trades that you can learn from, and I'm going to break them down in a simple manner so that you can start learning from some of the strategies that I use. 

I trade in a very simple way. It stops confusion and just makes life a lot easier. I'm going to show you two concepts that you can use right now that are really easy to understand but can bring you some really good profits. Additionally, I'll show you a real trade example that I took with my team and locked in for a nice profit. 

Charts & Candlesticks Explained 

Just to explain real quick, this is a chart. 

This is the kind of chart that you will be doing technical analysis on. It's called a Japanese candlestick chart, and each of these blocks you see, the blue and red blocks, are called Japanese candlesticks. A candlestick shows a range of price movement within a given time frame. 

Look over to the top left here. We have monthly, weekly, daily, 4-hour, 30-minute, 5-minute time frames. Depending on which of these time frames we are looking at, it depends on how much price action we're examining. For this 4-hour time frame, each one of these candlesticks shows 4 hours of price movement. The red candles show bearish price action or falling price, and the blue candles show bullish price action where the market has been going up. 

Trend Direction 

Now that you understand that, the first thing I'm going to do when looking for a trade is identify the direction of the trend. We do that by looking for higher highs and higher lows or lower lows and lower highs in a market. 

In this example, we have the low just here. We had a push up to this level, then we pulled back to this level. We pushed up to this level, and now we're pulling back. We haven't yet broken this low just here.

So, what we've got is a higher high, higher low, higher high. It's quite obvious from this that the market is moving up, which is what we want to see because now we know we can look for buying opportunities. 

Supply & Demand Zones 

Now, the second thing I look for is supply and demand. Supply and demand is a very simple but very effective concept. All we're doing when we're looking for supply and demand zones is looking for an area where the market has moved sideways before a big up move or sideways before a big down move. 

The sideways price action before a big up move is a demand zone. This is where demand has come into the market. Basically, what that means is this is a level that traders bought at previously, which caused a big upward move in the market. So, here we can see sideways action followed by a big up move. This is a demand zone. 

For an example of a supply zone, we have this small sideways bit of movement before this big down move. So, this would be a supply zone. We know that demand zones are good levels to buy from. We also know that the market is moving up at this point in time. If the market can get back to this demand zone, it would become an attractive level for me to buy from because we have a market that's moving up, and now we've identified a good level to buy from to continue moving up with the market. 

Low Time Frame Entry 

So, what I do at this point is go to a lower time frame. For this trade example, I'm going to go all the way down to the 5-minute chart. Now, the market has come all the way down and traded into the demand zone. We're looking at the 5-minute chart at this point. 

What you'll notice by looking at the 5-minute chart here is that we have a new trend. We know the high time frame trend, the 4-hour trend, was up. But down here, we can actually see that the market is forming lower lows and lower highs. So, it's actually in a downtrend now. 

One of the safest ways to get into trades is to wait for the low time frame and the high time frame trends to agree. The 4-hour trend is up, and the demand zone is suggesting I should look to buy. But instead of just buying immediately at the demand zone, we can make sure this low time frame agrees with us by looking for something that we call a break of structure. 

A break of structure is simply a name that we give to a trend reversal. If we know a downtrend is indicated by lower lows and lower highs, and an uptrend is indicated by higher highs and higher lows, then to get a break of structure or a reversal in the trend, we're looking for the market to break the downtrend by making a higher high. 

The moment the market makes higher high, it tells us that the market is no longer moving down. The market has reversed and is likely to continue moving up in a new phase of higher highs and higher lows. So, the break of structure would come at this level. If the market managed to push above, as we can see, the market has indeed pushed above that level. 

Trade Entry, Stop Loss & Take Profit 

So, now we've started a new uptrend. Because we know this is a high-interest area to buy from, seeing this new bullish move indicates that we might be in for a really nice trade. 

What I would do here is very simply use the same demand concept to mark out that sideways area before the big up move. Then, I would place my buy trade here using a buy limit. We would then put a stop loss below this low. 

So, now our trade is beginning to be set up, but there's one more thing we need, and that's a target. We need to make sure that we can win more on this trade than we're risking. If I risk $1,000 over this price move, I need to be looking to make $2,000, $3,000, or $4,000 or more on the way up. 

I’ve just jumped back to the 4-hour chart to find an easy target. High time frames have less noise, fewer candles, so they’re easier to work with. We can actually use a very simple rule of using supply and demand once again, but this time for targets. 

For this trade example, we would look for a supply zone. What's a supply zone? Well, it’s a sideways price action area before a big down move. Here, we can see there's a supply zone nearby, so we could use this as our target. 

We would be expecting the market to push from where it is up to this level, following that new change in the low time frame trend. We can go back down to the low time frame and pull our target all the way up towards this area. This would make for 5.4 times our risk. So, if we risk $1,000 on this trade, we will make $5,400 in the event that the trade wins. 

With our buy limit, stop loss, and take profit placed, we can now go and do whatever we want, and the market will work for us in the background. You can see that this really doesn't take a lot of time. As soon as the trade’s executed, we can do whatever we want with our time. The market is going to work for us, and our trade position is going to make money for us regardless of how we spend our day. This is why we get so much freedom as successful traders. 

As you can see, the buy limit is now triggered, and the market starts to push to the upside. Now, if we give this trade a little bit of time, we'll come back in a moment and see how it worked out. 

So, now coming back to this position, you can see that the trade is completed. We traded towards the supply area, the target was filled, and if you check the balance at the bottom, we've made $541. 

Real Trade Examples ($18,000 Profit) 

Now, for transparency, this is a simulated account because I'm showing you a recap of a trade I took previously. But here's the trade that I took in real time, which actually did make me over $5,000.

Here's a couple more trades that I took recently: 

This one made me over $2,000 in just a few minutes of work. 

This one made me $6,000 in a day. 

This one actually made me $11,000 overnight. 

All of these trades use this simple price action approach, and this strategy has brought people huge results. 

Learn More About My $21,000,000 Strategy 

If you want to learn more about my strategy that gets me results like this, this, and this, and allows beginner traders to get started making profits like this, this, and this in just a few months with 1 to 2 hours per day of work. 

Start Making $10k/Month Trading 

Click this link, That's going to take you to a post showing you how to use my strategy and leverage the opportunity of prop firms to start making your first $1,000 to $3,000 per week trading.

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