Mr. Hyde wrote:eurusd-m5-hugo-s-way.pngeurusd-h4-hugo-s-way.png
HTF zone. LTF QM pattern
LOSER. Probably will retrace to bottom of the HTF zone, even through a spike lower. Then look for a long if still interested. Or it just blows out the bottom
Moderator: moderators
Mr. Hyde wrote:eurusd-m5-hugo-s-way.pngeurusd-h4-hugo-s-way.png
HTF zone. LTF QM pattern
Mr. Hyde wrote:I know this might be an impossible question to anwser. But why would the S/D indy mark that bottom supply zone (red arrow). In my eyes it has no characteristics of S/D that we would look for. And it marks these quite often and they have a high rate of success. Any comments?
eurnzd-h1-hugo-s-way.png
judokamak wrote:Mr. Hyde wrote:I know this might be an impossible question to anwser. But why would the S/D indy mark that bottom supply zone (red arrow). In my eyes it has no characteristics of S/D that we would look for. And it marks these quite often and they have a high rate of success. Any comments?
eurnzd-h1-hugo-s-way.png
It just marks last high. I think all s/d indicators lack a control feature in which one would specify how many pips (x) a price must travel in y amount
of candles for a zone to be actually considered a s/d zone. This would be momentum marking, the rest is just s/r.
Mr. Hyde wrote:Mr. Hyde wrote:eurusd-m5-hugo-s-way.pngeurusd-h4-hugo-s-way.png
HTF zone. LTF QM pattern
LOSER. Probably will retrace to bottom of the HTF zone, even through a spike lower. Then look for a long if still interested. Or it just blows out the bottom
Mr. Hyde wrote:Why not
Mr. Hyde wrote:A whole lot of confluence for a long