Disliked1) Hard work pays.
2) Patterns are almost always the same, then trade them, when they do not work, make sure you lost less than yours previous winners.
3) Hard work pays.Ignored
laughing when saw your pics.
I love PIE and RTP
Fozzy Chat Room 7 replies
Disliked1) Hard work pays.
2) Patterns are almost always the same, then trade them, when they do not work, make sure you lost less than yours previous winners.
3) Hard work pays.Ignored
DislikedThanks. It helps!!
To make sure something in your first chart, 'the supply got consumed' you mentioned, do you actually mean rejection?Ignored
DislikedHe means that there had been sell orders left there after price dropped
These got triggered on first return
So when price comes back again, those particular orders will no longer be there
Hope that helpedIgnored
DislikedHello guys,
I have posted this in PIE but someone suggested that I should post it here. Could somebody please look at it?
This was my post:
Nice thread. All the comments and analysis definately helps learning about supply and demand.
By now, I can identified potential supply and demand levels/area but there is a question that still burn my lips.
I see different guys here taking trades on a 15 or 5 min chart and I was wondering if you just take the trade based on the distance between the supply and demand or if there was a way for finding...Ignored
http://www.forexfactory.com/images/buttons/quote.gif (http://www.forexfactory.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=5281578)
DislikedHello guys,
I have posted this in PIE but someone suggested that I should post it here. Could somebody please look at it?
This was my post:
Nice thread. All the comments and analysis definately helps learning about supply and demand.
By now, I can identified potential supply and demand levels/area but there is a question that still burn my lips.
I see different guys here taking trades on a 15 or 5 min chart and I was wondering if you just take the trade based on the distance between the supply and demand or if there was a way...Ignored
DislikedHey guys, I've seen the term magnet and seen it on the charts a couple of times if the PIE thread. I don't fully understand what this term represents and was just wondering if anyone could shed any light on this for me.
CheersIgnored
DislikedMy take on this is that supply is attracted to demand. Demand is attracted to supply.
cheersIgnored
Dislikedyep, but say there are 3 supply levels drawn in on a chart, why is only one labelled magnet? and what is the significance of that level?
CheersIgnored
DislikedThree supply zones would imply 3 differnt tf. Magnet or target would be the same according to the traders mm/rrIgnored