3. Liquidity
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Video Transcript
Before we start, can I just ask a question
on the chart you were showing on the weekly,
the EUR/USD weekly? Sure you can, come on. Let
me just keep playing. I saw this question first.
This one, yeah? Yeah. Alright, is
it? Actually, no, not that one,
the EUR/USD live chart on the weekly.
Yeah, I'm coming Chris, not you.
I'm talking about Azad. Yeah,
sure, Azad makes sense. Yeah.
Makes sense, makes total sense. So, if
you look at this, right here, for example,
I said this guy was mitigating some form of
supply, perhaps it's even grabbed liquidity,
you know, indicating that there could
be certain, you know, correction,
and you just wait patiently, you had a big US
inducement, you sell this, you see the purpose
of the substructure is because you don't
know if price is going to continue lower,
or is going to break higher. So, if you are
waiting for the break, then you miss the trade.
Yeah. So, here now, I'll sell this guy,
and when price came all the way here,
there's certain type of liquidity that might be
looking forward to here, and when it comes there,
I'm going to buy this guy, or I'll wait
for this to happen, then I'll buy this guy,
then I'll take partials on this sell,
buy this, then I see which one, where it
wants to break to. Okay, that's this, this is
what you want to do when you're playing this.
However, sometimes when you understand what
the higher time frame is, perhaps the higher
time frame shows you something like this.
Sorry. Yeah, something like this ending here.
So, you know, with this now, I can tell, okay,
this is just here, even all of this is still a
substructure to this, but still the five minutes I
can try to catch this sell, when price comes here,
gives me this, and this is sufficient, and I
look forward again, it gives me something like,
then I can buy this. So, I know that in this case,
given my higher time frame liquidity cycle, this
is more than likely going to play out compared
to this. Do you understand that, everyone? Yeah.
So, Anil? Yeah. Yeah. Yes, sir.
So, let me see. So, yeah, so what you're
saying. So this, this is external.
So from here, low, all the way up here. I can't
see your annotation. I can't see your annotation.
Okay, I can see it now. Yeah. So, yeah.
So, low, high, low, high, because
it broke it here, and then low,
and then the high here. So, then you're
saying that from between here and here,
all of this is substructure, right? Yeah. Yeah.
So, now, you see, you see, you
marked it wrongly. How? Just
one little detail, you get run
up. You were right to mark this.
You're right to mark this,
right? You're right to mark this. Hold
on. You're right to mark this here.
What about this transaction that took place
here? Can I see that canvas different? And
it led to a new high. Can you see that? And
after that, there was this guy here, right?
Whatever happens, then there was this guy here,
there was this guy here. Pay attention to all
of this transaction that is happening
outside of those external structures.
Then you have this guy here, this guy here,
this guy here. And finally, we break here,
go here, here, here, here, then
here, then here. See that? Yeah.
That answers my question. Yeah. So, because I
marked that wrong, that answers my question now.
I was going to say that, why did you say
that? So, if this was all straight like this,
I would say this is internal to Wikipedia,
which is going to be. Everything here will
be a substructure of Wikipedia, definitely.
So, you don't need to change how you analyze.
You don't need to change anything. It just helps
you to get a better understanding and helps you
to put that precision to every transaction
that is happening in the market. Yeah.
Yeah. Because if I say that this
is the low and that's the high,
then this will be substructure.
Yeah, it will be substructure.
But I will still be analyzing this on
my weekly timeframe and still see what
it looks like on the daily. The only thing
here is that the moment price breaks here,