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The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

@Bradgohtrades18,037 subscribers

Trading for 8 Years | Founder @edgefloai I don't want your $$, I want you to become a better trader. Get My FREE Trading Courses on YT Below ⬇️

Shorts

Just created a complete tutorial on how I made $558k in one trade—the exact strategy using 5-min demand zones, bullish confirmation and supply zones. For 24 hours, it's yours for FREE. Like + comment "WORKBOOK" and I'll DM it to you. (must be following + RT for priority)

Just created a complete tutorial on how I made $558k in one trade—the exact strategy using 5-min demand zones, bullish confirmation and supply zones. For 24 hours, it's yours for FREE. Like + comment "WORKBOOK" and I'll DM it to you. (must be following + RT for priority)

73,342 views

Just created a complete tutorial on on identifying high-probability A+ trading setups. It includes the 5-step checklist, timing windows and when NOT to trade. Like + comment "TUTORIAL" and I'll DM it to you. (must be following + RT for priority)

Just created a complete tutorial on on identifying high-probability A+ trading setups. It includes the 5-step checklist, timing windows and when NOT to trade. Like + comment "TUTORIAL" and I'll DM it to you. (must be following + RT for priority)

34,124 views

Videos

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After 1,000+ trades, this is the only setup that consistently works in any market condition. It's called liquidity sweep reversal—and it's the highest probability trading strategy I know. Before I show you what it is, here are the two things most traders get wrong with it: 1) They enter too early and get stopped out on the second sweep. 2) They try to predict the LAST sweep with certainty This is a sure-fire way to burn your money. Here's what to do instead: Step 1: Identify market control Look at structure. Higher highs and higher lows? Buyers are in control. We're only trading from demand zones. Step 2: Mark your liquidity zones Find equal lows. When retail sees a "double bottom," they go long because textbooks tell them to. Their stop losses sit right below those lows. Available liquidity for institutions to sweep. Step 3: Wait for the sweep Price drops, sweeps those stops, liquidates retail traders, then creates a sharp V-shaped reaction. This sweep breaks structure. Zoom into 1-hour timeframe - price was making lower highs and lows. After the sweep? Higher highs and higher lows. That sweep zone becomes your institutional demand zone. Step 4: Enter on mitigation Wait for price to pull back to the liquidity zone. Enter there. Stop below the zone. Target 2-3R. Remember: You'll NEVER predict with 100% certainty when it's the LAST liquidity sweep. Sometimes price sweeps 2-3 times before the real move. But that's trading—we trade probabilities, not certainties. Also, keep in mind: If you can't spot the liquidity, you ARE the liquidity. — This is just a breakdown of one of the trading strategies we covered in our 2-hour long cryptocurrency trading course. I also discussed the trend pullback strategy, how to trade breakout retests without getting stopped out on fake moves, and why understanding liquidity is the only way to avoid becoming exit liquidity. Just comment "COURSE" and I'll DM it to you immediately so you can watch it.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

53,804 views • 5 months ago

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When it comes to trading, I hold this strong belief: “I don’t think the hard part is in the entry…The hard part is determining whether it is the right price point to get out for maximum profitability” Here’s the truth: Amateurs obsess over entries. Experienced traders obsess over exits. Here's my simple exit framework: STOP LOSS PLACEMENT Ask yourself: "What price point invalidates my trade idea?" • Conservative approach: Place your stop below the protected low (for buys) or above the protected high (for sells) • Aggressive approach: Place it below/above the candlestick that swept liquidity Never place stops randomly. They must be logical points that prove your hypothesis wrong. TAKE PROFIT PLACEMENT Target the next opposing institutional zone where price will naturally gravitate. • For long trades: Target the next supply zone that swept liquidity • For short trades: Target the next demand zone that swept liquidity Look at your left side of the chart to identify where institutions previously entered with large orders. The key is finding the "sweet spot"—far enough to maximize profits, but not so far that price reverses before reaching it. — This is just a short clip of a 40-minute video also covering how to identify institutional zones, when NOT to trade to avoid losses, and how to spot liquidity sweeps like the pros. If you want to learn how to spot A+ setups consistently, I can send the full video to you. Just comment "TRADING" and it’ll be in your inbox in the next hour.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

46,683 views • 5 months ago

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Let me walk you through an actual futures trade using our 3-step trading system. This system is what I use for EVERY futures trade—the 3 steps are: Step 1: Break of Structure Step 2: Mark the Zone Step 3: Wait for Entry Let’s dive in… Step 1: Break of Structure On the 5-minute chart, price takes out the previous swing high. Trend = bullish. We're only looking for longs. Step 2: Mark the Zone I draw a demand zone at the lowest consolidation that LED to that break of structure. Now I validate it: • Broke structure ✓ • Created imbalance (gap on 1-minute chart) ✓ • Swept liquidity (double bottom trap for retail) ✓ Step 3: Wait for Entry Price drops back into my zone. Here's the critical part: Retail traders enter immediately. They get excited. They place stops below the low. I do nothing. I wait for price to sweep those stops—the liquidity grab. THEN I enter on the second move up. Here’s my results from a live trade: • Entry: After liquidity sweep • Stop loss: Below sweep candle (10 points) • Take profit: 1:2 ratio (20 points) • Position size: 2 contracts (1% risk on $10K account) Price hesitates. Drops slightly. Then rips to TP. — This is just scratching the surface. In the full 2-hour futures trading masterclass, I break down: • How to calculate exact position sizes • The 3 beginner futures mistakes that cost traders thousands • Live chart examples walking through actual entries and exits step-by-step Just comment "FUTURES" and I'll send you the complete masterclass in the next few minutes.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

29,655 views • 4 months ago

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The Complete Futures Trading Strategy (Just 3 Steps, 2 Timeframes) (and if you want the full 2-hour masterclass from which the video below was clipped from—just comment “MASTERCLASS” and I’ll DM it to you in the next few minutes) Firstly, futures trading helps you achieve consistent profits with maximum flexibility—trade around your 9-5, your timezone, or any lifestyle commitment. It's one of the easiest markets to trade because: (1) You get regulated leverage without shady brokers (2) Deep liquidity means instant execution with zero slippage (3) Markets are open 23 hours a day from Sunday evening to Friday evening (4) And you can trade during Asia, London, or New York sessions—whenever fits YOUR schedule. HOW TO START: You only need 2 timeframes: 1) Higher timeframe: 5-minute 2) Lower timeframe: 1-minute Then we use these while following the 3-step strategy: Step 1: Identify Break of Structure On the 5-minute chart, find where price breaks the previous swing high (bullish) or swing low (bearish). This tells you the trend direction. If bullish, only look for longs. If bearish, only shorts. Step 2: Mark High-Probability Zones Find the supply/demand zone that LED to that break of structure. A high-probability zone must have all three: 1) Created a break of structure 2) Left an imbalance (gap in price) 3) Swept liquidity (triggered stop losses) Step 3: Wait for Entry Signal Avoid entering on first mitigation—that's the trap (inducement). Instead, wait for price to: 1) Mitigate your zone 2) Create a fake bounce (inducement) 3) Sweep the liquidity below/above that first reaction 4) THEN enter on the second move Then place stop loss below the liquidity sweep candle. Target minimum 1:2 risk-reward.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

21,749 views • 4 months ago

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Why does price reverse the second you enter? Because you're reacting to micro structure shifts while institutions are still executing the macro trend. Every market operates in 2 ranges simultaneously: 1) External range (macro structure) 2) Internal range (micro structure) Every market is always operating within BOTH ranges simultaneously. 1) External Ranges How do you identify it? Look at the SIZE of the pullbacks. If one pullback is twice the size of the others—that's your external break of structure. What does it tell you? Your overall bias. If the external range is bearish, you should be looking for sells. If it's bullish, you should be looking for buys. The external range doesn't tell you when NOT to trade—it tells you WHAT DIRECTION to trade. 2) Internal Ranges How do you identify it? Look for small breaks of structure that happen WITHIN your external range. These are the tiny pullbacks that barely move price compared to the major swings. What does it tell you? Short-term trading opportunities. You CAN trade internal breaks, but manage your expectations. These aren't trend reversals—they're temporary counter-moves that create pullbacks before price continues with the external trend. The internal range tells you when there's a short-term trade setup, but NOT to expect a full reversal. In the video below, I've explained what happens when you trade internal breaks without identifying the external ranges (and how to solve this): — This is just one concept from my complete trading framework. We also cover how to identify when external structure is actually shifting, the 3 timeframes every trader needs to understand and how to identify discount zones for entry points. Just comment "RANGES" and the full breakdown will automatically be DM'd to you in the next few minutes.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

21,253 views • 4 months ago

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What Makes an A+++ Setup (According to a $291K Trader) A setup is the specific market condition where all your criteria align for a high-probability trade entry. Most traders don't understand the criteria that makes a solid entry. They take every setup that looks "good enough" — and end up with 1:2 or 1:3 risk-to-reward ratios, grinding for small wins. Here's the difference: An A+++ setup allowed my student Said to make $86,000 in one day from just 3 trades (with 1:18, 1:7, and 1:10 R/R). And $291k over the last 1.5 years. If there’s a mediocre setup, he won’t take it. Some weeks he only trades twice because he's waiting for perfection. In the 2-minute clip below, my student Said walks through the 5 elements that must align for an A+++ setup: 1) Inverse Fair Value Gap — An imbalance price needs to fill 2) Inducement — Liquidity sweep that triggers early traders 3) Imbalance — Gap in price delivery that draws price back 4) Protected Level — Previous inducement + break of structure creates an internal floor/ceiling 5) Break of Structure — Confirmation that one side is in control Said also looks for setups where you have TWO protected levels, not just one. This gives him the confidence to enter at the end of the fair value gap without waiting for additional confirmation. Stop loss goes just below the protected level — tight risk, massive reward potential. — This is just scratching the surface of what Said shared. In the full 1-hour interview, we also dove into: • The exact 3 trades that made him $86K in a single day (with timestamped chart breakdowns) • How he combined two different strategies into one profitable system • Why he still backtests 1-1.5 hours daily even after making $100K/month Just comment "INTERVIEW" and I'll DM you the full interview in the next few minutes.

The Trading Geek (Brad Goh)

15,300 views • 5 months ago