# This Price Action Strategy Beats 10,000 Hours of Day Trading

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** The Secret Mindset
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owz1w37cVHs
- **Дата:** 06.06.2026
- **Длительность:** 13:09
- **Просмотры:** 14,034
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/53003

## Описание

This is my best price action trading strategy that beats years of day trading theory. Use this mechanical day trading strategy to filter bad setups in just a few seconds.
This video breaks down a complete price action trading strategy that removes the guesswork from your morning routine. If you are struggling with consistency or just looking for price action trading for beginners, this step-by-step checklist keeps your account safe.
Instead of staring at charts all day, this day trading strategy uses hard price action rules to filter out traps. By mastering day trading price action, you learn exactly when to enter and when to sit on your hands. Many professionals consider a simple, rule-based approach to be the best day trading strategy because it completely eliminates your feelings. If you want to immediately improve your price action day trading, copy this exact 7-step routine before your next session.

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## Транскрипт

### Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00) []

If you want to become a profitable day  trader, you need to try this strategy. My routine takes less than 30 seconds. It is based on price action, and it helps me  find the best setups without overthinking. Everything starts with one question. Get this wrong, and nothing else matters. I ask myself one specific question: Which way are the impulses moving? Look at this chart. See these waves? This move pushes hard to the downside. That is an impulse. Then price retraces a bit. That is a correction. Then another strong push down. The impulses are bigger than the corrections. That tells me we are in a downtrend. And I am only looking for shorts. Now watch what happens when I mark the  same structure on this chart over here. Impulse up. Correction. Then another impulse up. The correction stays smaller than the  impulses, which means this is an uptrend. And I am only looking for longs. Simple so far. But here is where most traders get destroyed. See this pullback right here? It looks scary. Price is dropping. Momentum seems to be shifting. And your gut starts screaming: "This is reversing. Get out. " Or even worse: "I should short this. " Do not. This is still just a correction. The impulses are still bigger, and  the trend is completely intact. I have to remind myself of this constantly. I trade the impulse direction, not the correction. But there is a trap you need to watch for. What happens when a correction  grows larger than the last impulse? Watch this example. Impulse down. Then a correction starts. And it keeps going. Now it is bigger than the  impulse that came before it. That is not a correction anymore. That is a potential trend shift. The moment I see that happen, I stop trading that  direction until the market proves itself again. So before I think about levels, before I look for   entries, and before I check any  indicator, I answer one question: Which way are the impulses moving? If I cannot answer that  clearly, I do not have a trade. I have a guess. But knowing direction alone is not enough. You also need to know where to act. Okay, now you know which way to trade. But if you trade from the wrong spot, you will  get stopped out before the move even starts. You cannot just enter anywhere. You need to know where price is likely to react. These are your key levels. They are the spots where price  tends to bounce or break. Here is how I think about it. Price does not wander randomly. It moves toward these levels like a magnet. Then it either bounces or breaks through. Watch this. Price is approaching this zone from below. This area rejected price several times  before, which makes it resistance. This is the location where  I start paying attention. See that? Another rejection right at the level. This is where the trade starts to form. But here is the mistake I made for years. I would identify a level. Price would get close to it. And I would just enter. No real confirmation. No trigger. Just, "Price is at the level,  so it must be time to trade. " That is not a system. That is gambling with extra steps. The level tells you where. It does not tell you when. That is what the next filter is for. But there is something that  makes these levels actually work. Notice how I am finding these  levels on a higher time frame first. I mark them on the hourly or the 4-hour chart. Then I drop down to my day trading  time frame to look for entries. This keeps me focused on  levels that actually matter. Not every minor bounce on a  5-minute chart means something. You now have direction and location locked in. But you are still not ready to enter,  because you are missing the trigger. This is what separates traders who  guess from traders who execute. Your entry trigger is something concrete. It either happens or it does not. Watch this. Here is a downtrend. Price pulls back up into resistance. I am watching, but I am not entering  just because price touched the level. I am waiting for this bearish engulfing candle. The body of this red candle completely  swallows the previous green one. And that is my trigger to get short. Or look at this setup. Price is at support. Then I notice this massive long wick.

### Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00) [5:00]

That is a trigger. Now I can act. The trigger itself does  not need to be complicated. It just needs to be specific. Here is the rule I follow. If I cannot point to the exact candle  or pattern that told me to enter,   then I did not have a trigger. I had a feeling. And trust me, feelings lose money. Now, here is something I learned the hard way. Sometimes your preferred  trigger just does not show up. Price is at the perfect level. Direction is clear. Everything looks good. But that engulfing candle never forms. So I always have a backup trigger. A plan B. Maybe it is a pin bar instead. break of a mini  trend line inside the correction. Something else that confirms the same idea: The pullback is ending, and the  next impulse is about to start. You need both a primary  trigger and a backup trigger. Otherwise, you will end up forcing  trades that are not really there. You now know what you are looking for. A specific event. Not a feeling. That alone will stop you from  entering trades too early. But here is the problem. Even with direction, location, and  a clean trigger, you can still lose. I did consistently, until I added the next filter. This is where I stopped losing half my trades. Here is the truth. Price movement can lie to you. Volume does not. Watch this example. Price breaks above this level,  and it looks like a breakout. But look at the volume bar underneath. It is below average. Nothing special. There is no real commitment behind this move. And what happens next? Price reverses. All those breakout traders are now  trapped and getting stopped out. Now look at this one. Same situation. Price is breaking through resistance. But check the volume. It is way above average. That is real participation. Real commitment to the move. And this breakout holds. The rule is simple. I want to see above-average or increasing  volume confirming the move I am about to trade. If volume is weak or declining, I stay skeptical,  no matter how good the setup looks on the chart. This applies to your entry trigger, too. By the way, if I get a bearish  engulfing candle at resistance,   but the volume on that candle is pathetic,  I am much less confident in the trade. Volume tells you whether other  participants agree with your idea. If they do not, you are trading alone. And trading alone usually means losing. You are now reading something  most traders completely ignore. But there is another layer of confirmation  I need before I pull the trigger. This filter would have saved me thousands  of dollars if I had learned it earlier. I use two time frames, and that is it. The higher time frame shows me context. The lower entries. If they do not agree, I do not trade. Let me show you what happens when you ignore this. Here is the 15-minute chart. Clear downtrend. Price pulls back to resistance. I get my trigger. A nice rejection candle. Everything looks perfect. But when I zoom out to the  4-hour chart, look at that. We are actually in an uptrend  on the higher time frame. My resistance is just a  pullback in a bigger move up. I am trying to short right into a wave of buyers. That trade loses. Of course it does. The fix is simple. Before I enter anything, I  check the higher time frame. If both time frames agree on  direction, I take the trade. If they conflict, I walk away. No alignment, no trade. That is the rule. You can have the cleanest setup  in the world on your lower chart. But if the higher one is screaming the opposite  direction, you are not trading correctly. Okay, five filters down. You are already seeing more  than most traders ever will. But we are not done. Because even a fully confirmed setup  can blow up if the math does not work. The sixth filter is risk-to-reward. Listen, I do not care how beautiful a setup looks. If the math does not work, I do not take it. Before I enter any trade, I  need two things figured out: Where my stop goes. And where my target is. The stop goes at the point  where my idea is proven wrong. If I am long and expecting a bounce from  support, my stop goes below support. If price reaches that level,  I was wrong about the trade.

### Segment 3 (10:00 - 13:00) [10:00]

Simple as that. The target goes at the next level that could  realistically cause price to reverse against me. The next resistance if I am long. Or the next support if I am short. Then I measure the distances. If the distance to my target is smaller than  stop, the math does not work. I would be risking more than  I could realistically gain. I need at least 2:1 or better. Watch this example. Entry right here. Stop goes below this level. That is 20 pips of risk. Target is at the next resistance,  with over 60 pips of potential reward. This gives me around 3R. That math works. So I take the trade. Now look at this one. Same quality setup on the surface. Entry here. Stop below. That is 40 pips of risk. But the next resistance is only 30 pips away. The setup looks good. But the math says, "Do not touch it. " So I pass. Okay, one more filter. And this one might be the most important. The final filter is you. Everything can be aligned. Direction. Location. Trigger. Volume. Time frame alignment. Risk-to-reward. And you can still sabotage the trade. Maybe you are tired. Maybe you are distracted. Maybe you just took a loss, and now  you are trying to make it back fast. Before I enter any trade,  I ask myself one question: Does this feel like patience or desperation? The best setups jump out at me. I look at the chart, and I know immediately. There is no forcing it. No convincing myself. The trade is either obvious, or it is not. If I am hesitating, if I am talking myself into   it, or if I am revenge trading,  that is my signal to walk away. And if I am not mentally  right, stressed, frustrated,   unfocused, whatever, I do not trade that day. Period. You now see the market completely  differently than you did 10 minutes ago. You are not guessing direction. You are reading impulses. You are not entering anywhere. You are waiting for the right location. You are not hoping. You are waiting for a trigger. You are not trusting price alone. You are checking if volume agrees. You are not fighting the bigger picture. You are aligning with it. You are not taking bad math. You are measuring before you risk. And you are not trading desperate. You are trading with patience. All seven filters have to pass. Not five. Not six. All seven. So print this checklist and  put it next to your screen. Consult it before every trade you take. Now, this is only the foundation video. If you want to go deeper and speed up your  learning curve, watch this video next. And if you are ready to fit this  into a full A-to-Z trading system,   that is what our academy is for.
