A post with Youtube video

26
Jul

A post with Youtube video

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    How Long Does Anavar Stay In Your System?

    Below is a "cheat‑sheet" of the most frequently used market‑related words, grouped into themes that reflect how traders
    actually think about the market. Each entry contains a one‑sentence
    definition (or quick note) so you can glance
    at it and instantly recall what it means.




    Theme Term Quick Definition


    Market structure Bid The highest price a buyer is willing to
    pay for an asset.


    Ask The lowest price a seller is willing to accept for
    an asset.


    Spread Difference between ask and bid; a proxy for transaction cost or liquidity.



    Liquidity How quickly and cheaply you can buy/sell without moving the market price.



    Depth Volume available at each price level beyond the best bid/ask.




    Order book Public record of all open bids and asks in a
    trading venue.


    Price dynamics Support Price level where buying interest often prevents further decline.



    Resistance Price level where selling pressure often caps upward movement.



    Trendline Straight line connecting two or more price extremes; indicates directional
    bias.


    Breakout Event when price moves beyond a support/resistance or trendline with high
    volume.


    Pullback Temporary reversal of a prevailing trend,
    often used as an entry point.


    Risk & management Stop‑loss Order placed to close
    a position if the market moves against you beyond a preset level.



    Take‑profit Target price at which a trader locks in gains.



    Position sizing Determining how many units of an asset to trade based on risk tolerance and account size.



    Risk‑reward ratio Comparison of potential loss versus potential gain (e.g., 1:
    3).


    ---




    How to Use This Cheat Sheet



    Step What to Do Why It Helps


    1. Scan the board Look for obvious patterns or setups that match your trading plan (e.g., a
    bullish engulfing on a key support level).
    Quick identification of potential trades without over‑analysis.



    2. Confirm with indicators Cross‑check price action against a few chosen tools: e.g.,
    20‑period SMA, RSI >70/30. Adds confirmation and reduces false positives.



    3. Decide your exit strategy Use the "Stop‑Loss"
    and "Take‑Profit" columns from the cheat sheet or set them based on ATR/volatility.
    Protects capital and locks in profits.


    4. Execute with discipline Stick to the trade plan; avoid chasing
    after a price that moved against you without proper stop‑loss.
    Maintains consistency across sessions.


    ---




    5️⃣ How to Keep It Simple While Avoiding "Too Many Tools"



    Risk of Over‑Complication Quick Fix


    Tool overload – mixing dozens of indicators leads to confusion. Stick to
    2–3 core tools: a trend indicator, an oscillator (e.g., RSI), and a volatility measure (ATR).



    Analysis paralysis – waiting for "perfect" signals delays action. Use a rule‑based approach: if the trend is up and RSI 70 then take
    trade.


    Confirmation bias – picking only what you like.
    Keep a trade log and review outcomes objectively; adjust if patterns repeat.



    Data noise – too many short‑term signals cause whipsaws.

    Use a longer lookback for trend (e.g., 50‑period
    SMA) to filter minor fluctuations.


    ---




    Quick Decision Flow (Rule‑Based)




    Determine Trend


    - If price >50‑period SMA → Uptrend

    - Else if price 2 %
    from yesterday’s close, sell when it drops by >1 %, with
    stop‑loss/target limits). This structured approach is more likely to yield success than random
    guessing.

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