Showing posts with label Turtle Soup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turtle Soup. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

ICT NY Midnight Open and the Previous Day's High and Low | Darya Filipenka

This is how I incorporate the New York Midnight Open (NMO) level when I prepare my premarket plan. This also helps me to predict possible trend day. Previous highs and lows are important in trading as they can indicate potential market reversals or continuation of a trend. When the market has a predisposed bias or trend, you want to focus on the previous day's high or low. If the market reaches the previous day's high and you're bullish, you want to see if it creates an optimal trade entry. Many times, this formation forms throughout the week in various currencies and assets. There are instances where the market raids the previous day's highs for buy stops and previous day's lows for sell stops. Not every previous day's high or low is the same in terms of opportunity, but there's a criteria to look for when seeking liquidity resting above or below these levels. Understanding the conditions that lead to a raid on buy stops above the previous day's high or sell stops below the previous day's low can help you identify potential market reversals.
 
PDH = Previous Day's High
PDL = Previous Day's Low 
PDA = Premium and Discount Arrays as a guide to determine where to buy and sell
 
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Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Turtle Soup Day In Day Out │ Max Singh

The Turtle Soup trading strategy was developed by Linda Bradford-Raschke and published in her 1996 book Street Smarts: High Probability Short-Term Trading Strategies
 

The strategy’s name is a reference to a well-known strategy called Turtle trading, taught by Richard Dennis and William Eckhardt in the 1980s to a group of novice traders called the 'Turtles'. 
 
 

Linda Bradford-Raschke inverted the reasoning behind the original Turtle strategy in order to develop a short-term trading method using false breakout reversals at key levels. The strategy can be used on 1 hour, 4 hour or daily charts. The method is simple but requires understanding of order flow and market structure. 

 
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