Monday, 15 December 2025
Saturday, 8 November 2025
Orderflow Trader's Perfect Scalping Trade set up @ 03/11/2025 on Sensex Index 84400 CE
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| Orderflow Trader's Perfect Scalping Trade set up@ 03/11/2025 on Sensex Index 84000 CE |
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| Professional Orderflow Trader in India |
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| Professional Orderflow Trader in Chennai |
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| Professional Orderflow Trader in India |
All previous levels retested upto 120 Points move as per enclosed previous Chart, atleast 2 scalping trades 'll do with 10 + Points Stop
Monday, 27 October 2025
Single Prints – Last Buyer / Last Seller in Hidden Trade Locations
Markets turn when the last buyer has bought at a high or when the last seller has sold at a low. With traditional bar charts you only see the low of the bar or the high of the bar. You cannot judge the internal buying or selling that has been apparent inside the bar.
What is the importance of the last buyer / last seller?
It is important because it potentially signals the end of the move. No one wants to buy or sell anymore. The price has gone too high or too low. It is at an extreme.
Think of it in real life terms. Imagine you sell beer. There is a lot of demand so you raise prices, but people keep buying. At some point people have drank a lot of beer and don’t want to drink anymore and by now the price is too high. So you might get 1 or 2 more beer sales before everyone stops buying beer and you find yourself lowering the price to get more interest and get people to buy again.
One of the truths about the markets is that when prices go up but people stop buying, prices go down. Sometimes it is quite obvious. You can see it in the Orderflow generated charts.It works both on short term and medium term charts. It can be used as a scalp trade or a swing trade.
Courtesy - Mike
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Thursday, 10 January 2019
Saturday, 2 September 2017
Know the opposition
There is only one answer to all these questions. I never sit idle in front of the charts. I watch every tick movement in my TTF and LTF and I try to maintain the feel for the market every moment whether I am in a trade or not.
You might already know by now the blue print of my trading plan. I will give a brief explanation of it as a quick presentation.
- First I structure the market using HTF and TTF.
- Then I find the future bias.
- Then the type of setup(s) to look for.
- Then the price level to initiate trade.
- Then I’ll wait until price approaches that level and then look for exhaustion or failure to continue beyond the level, to time the entry.
I follow the procedure in the same order. If I got stuck at a step, I will start again from step 1 and I don’t jump to the next step.
Simple, isn’t it??
If trading is that simple, the success ratio in this business would have been high. Let me try to explain why it is not that simple.
The first three steps, namely, structure, bias and the type of setup needs a hell lot of hard work to master. They demand a lot of understanding about the market dynamics and understanding about the strategy you are using , especially when you use price action for trading.
Technically, you need a lot of screen time, reviews and exposure to different market environments which obviously needs a lot of clock time (say years). On top of that, if you approach the market with an idea get rich quick, that learning curve will extend more. You need to find which structural boundaries work and which doesn’t, which trend definition work and which doesn’t, how to find the proper future bias in different scenarios in different market environments etc.
There is no way you can learn it without hard work and experience. So, the first thing you need to look for is to survive until you get enough experience to at least master these. There is no skill related stuff in these three steps. I repeat, it’s all about experience, reviews and the screen time. No other short cut. So, plan for the survival (at least 2 years) before actually thinking about making money in markets.
Identifying the price level also needs a lot of reviews and exposure as it depends on the context and the environment that the market is in. Let us say you are expecting a pullback setup.
To take that trade, you need to identify the price level where you expect that the pullback most likely ends before price actually reaches there. There will be a lot of such levels that can provide the orderflow to end the pullback.
To choose the best level between them, you have to consider the strength with which the trend is moving and the impact that the level you are examining has caused in the recent past. So, you must study a lot of samples of the pullback trades in different trending environments to know where they ended, test them in live and then make them a part of the trade plan. For me, there is no trade if I failed to identify a proper price level to initiate the trade. This increased my win% to a significant proportion. It needs a little bit of skill while reviewing and also while identifying the levels in live as you have to consider the context to choose the proper level.
- Gamblers, who don’t know what they are doing, not even a single word in technical analysis, but are trading for a random money and for adrenaline rush.
- Beginner traders, who know few basics about technical analysis like candlestick patterns, chart patterns, indicators, some price action related stuff etc, but with a very limited exposure to the markets (less than 3 years). They think that they can beat the market with the knowledge they gathered about the markets. Honestly, these are the guys who gonna suffer serious drawdowns as they trade with their arrogance, hope and belief without respecting the risk and the context that the market is in. They always pat their backs by looking at the hindsight charts and the way the market respected their analysis after the fact. As a matter of fact, these are the guys who pay our wages.
- Professionals, who are skillful, disciplined, hard workers and have a decent exposure to different states of the markets. They know what they are doing and they always respect the risk.








