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Summary
In order to gain an edge on the market, you need to anticipate trades rather than react to trades. Anticipating your trade entries and exits well before execution time will set you apart from your fellow traders. Gaining the best entry price possible puts you in a position of strength to make calm and clear decisions during the course of the trade. Most traders react to market movement causing them to chase an entry prices, which then puts them at a immediate disadvantage and they are acting from position of weakness Join Todd Gordon as he takes you inside his preferred entry and exit techniques to anticipate entries rather than react. Using Elliott Wave and Fibonacci methodology we will show you how to anticipate your next trade at least 3 hours ahead of time and at the best price possible. When you are thinking a step ahead of the market, you are trading as a market maker, not a market taker.Latest Live Videos
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD clings to gains above 1.0750 after US data
EUR/USD manages to hold in positive territory above 1.0750 despite retreating from the fresh multi-week high it set above 1.0800 earlier in the day. The US Dollar struggles to find demand following the weaker-than-expected NFP data.
GBP/USD declines below 1.2550 following NFP-inspired upsurge
GBP/USD struggles to preserve its bullish momentum and trades below 1.2550 in the American session. Earlier in the day, the disappointing April jobs report from the US triggered a USD selloff and allowed the pair to reach multi-week highs above 1.2600.
Gold struggles to hold above $2,300 despite falling US yields
Gold stays on the back foot below $2,300 in the American session on Friday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays in negative territory below 4.6% after weak US data but the improving risk mood doesn't allow XAU/USD to gain traction.
Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: Should you buy BTC here? Premium
Bitcoin (BTC) price shows signs of a potential reversal but lacks confirmation, which has divided the investor community into two – those who are buying the dips and those who are expecting a further correction.
Week ahead – BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week
Bank of England meets on Thursday, unlikely to signal rate cuts. Reserve Bank of Australia could maintain a higher-for-longer stance. Elsewhere, Bank of Japan releases summary of opinions.