Prop Trading Firms Don’t Want You to Win
They’ve stacked the deck against you.
We reverse-engineered their rulebook and found the passcode…
- Exact entry criteria
- Practical risk management plan
- A total risk framework to survive prop-firm rules
Join Don Kaufman tomorrow at 2PM EST — see the live proof and leave with the exact, repeatable rules you can run tomorrow.
Claim your seat now 👉 [Claim Your Seat Now]
Don here...
Jeff closed half his Yum Brands position today for a nice gain.
That's the third profitable short he's nailed in recent weeks while traders across the market keep trying to short the S&P and getting destroyed.
What's the difference?
Timing.
Jeff never shorts on the way up. He waits for the technical turn. Then he presses hard on the way down.
Sounds simple. Most traders can't do it.
Jeff made his money this year primarily from short positions.
In a raging bull market.
How?
He only shorts on the way down. He waits for multiple technical confirmations. He never fights vertical slopes.
The session includes detailed technical analysis on bounded versus unbounded oscillators. Half-bounded oscillators like the ADX have a floor but no ceiling. Zone-based oscillators provide clear extremes you can measure against.
Jeff covered Wells Wilder's contribution to technical analysis. The RSI. The ATR. The DMI. The ADX. These tools weren't designed for single-indicator trading. They work together to paint the complete picture algorithms respond to.
When all three indicators align, the trade becomes mechanical.
Home Depot right now shows bearish trend, flat declining moving average, strong ADX confirmation, and extreme negative positioning on the PZO.
That's four confirmations pointing the same direction.
Jeff's Yum Brands trade worked because he entered after the weekly indicator peaked and the setup triggered.
Not before. After.
In today's Live Trading Room session replay, you'll see:
- The complete Price Zone Oscillator framework Jeff uses to identify shortable setups. The PZO measures strength in zones. Readings above 40 signal strong trends. Below negative 40 signals aggressive selling. Jeff pairs it with a 60-day EMA for trend direction and the ADX for strength confirmation. When the ADX hits above 30 with downward price action, algorithms pile on the selling pressure.
- Why Home Depot is perfectly positioned for shorting right now. The moving average is flat and turning down. The PZO sits deep at negative 40. The ADX confirms bearish trend strength. Jeff explains why this three-part confirmation prevents the account-blowing mistakes most traders make fighting vertical slopes.
- The multi-indicator approach that prevents costly mistakes. Algorithms use multiple variables simultaneously. Jeff uses minimum three indicators, ideally four to six. The PZO measures positioning within zones. The moving average tracks trend. The ADX gauges strength. Single-indicator trading gets destroyed in algorithmic markets.
- Why overbought and oversold are conditions, not triggers. When the PZO shows oversold, algorithms treat that as a signal to keep pressing down. Jeff walked through how machines read these zones and continue pushing price until multiple technical conditions change simultaneously. You must wait for confirmation before taking positions against the trend.
- The exact zone levels that matter for trading decisions. Above 15 is moderate bullish. Above 40 is strong bullish. Below negative 5 is weak bearish. Below negative 40 is strong bearish. These zones function as support and resistance levels. Breaking through zones signals algorithmic participation intensifying.
→ Watch Jeff's complete technical breakdown to understand the oscillator framework that consistently profits from shorts while others get destroyed
To your success,
Don Kaufman
Chief Market Strategist, TheoTRADE
No comments:
Post a Comment