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A lot of traders spend hours looking at indicators, hoping for the "perfect signal." But the truth is that markets don't often reward people who only look for confirmation. Most of the time, the best chances come up before everyone else sees them.Traders often forget about context.
A chart is more than just candles going up and down; it shows liquidity, psychology, and positioning. When the price gets close to a key level, the real question isn't "Is this bullish or bearish?" It's "Where is the market likely to make traders make mistakes?"
This is why traders with a lot of experience pay more attention to reaction zones than predictions. A support level isn't just a line; it's a place where buyers have shown interest in the past. If the market goes back to that level and buyers come in again, it shows that the market is strong. If it breaks, the market usually moves quickly to the next area with lots of cash.
A lot of traders also make the mistake of making analysis too complicated. Support, resistance, trend direction, and liquidity pockets are all simple structures that the market often respects. The hard part isn't finding information; it's being able to focus on what really matters.
It's not about catching every move when you trade well. It's about knowing when the odds are in your favor and waiting for the market to show its hand. Traders who are willing to watch first, react second, and not chase noise often have the upper hand in this market.