USDCAD idea update - why you must get your entry right

Here's another example of the larger time frame providing plenty of chances on the lower time frame.

A healthy breakout is one with buildup against the level under attack. If we keep probing/failing....and STILL attacking the level from closer and closer, you know where the pressure is.

I'm sure you already use variable size to consistently risk the same % of your account per trade. i.e. keeping risk the same whether you're accounting for 10, 20, or 30 ticks/pips.

I'd suggest adding another filter - standardizing the SIZE of your stops. By that I mean if you're taking trades with stops between 10-30 ticks/pips, that's fine. But what if another move suggests a stop of 100 pips/ticks? Can you expect the same R out of the move? Are you actually just chasing price?

This filter will get you to be more disciplined about your entries, keeping them tight and decisive.

This move was already extended. But the level was attractive enough I expected a healthy push at least to the levels I marked out.

This is very different to trying to get in with a young, strong trend. You've got to recognize what you're trying to get out of the move and how the market is likely to react at SPECIFIC points.
Beyond Technical AnalysisbreakdownbreakoutChart PatternslevelsrstructuredtraderTrend AnalysisUSDCAD

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