You’re tired of staring at charts while news headlines scream one thing and your indicators say another.
I’ve been there. Spent years watching good setups vanish because I trusted the wrong signal.
Too much noise. Not enough clarity.
That’s why I built this approach (not) in a lab, but in real markets, through real losses and real wins.
It’s not theory. It’s what works when the market doesn’t care about your opinion.
Trading Tips Etrstrading cuts straight to the signal that matters.
No fluff. No hype. Just a repeatable way to spot high-probability trades.
I’ve tested this across bull runs, crashes, and sideways grinds.
You’ll walk away knowing exactly how to find those opportunities yourself.
Not someday. Today.
Etrstrading Isn’t Magic. It’s Momentum Math
Etrstrading is not a set of flashy indicators.
It’s how I read the market before it shouts.
Most traders wait for confirmation. They see the breakout, then jump in. I’m already positioned before the breakout happens.
Because momentum shifts don’t announce themselves. They leak. Through price action.
Through volume. Through where risk sits.
Price Action Confirmation isn’t about wicks or candle colors. It’s watching how price moves (does) it hold? Does it reject?
Does it stall exactly where prior structure says it should? If it doesn’t behave, I walk away. No debate.
Volume Analysis isn’t counting bars. It’s asking: Who’s here?
Is volume rising as price breaks resistance (or) fading? Fading volume on a breakout?
That’s a lie. I ignore it.
Risk-Defined Setups mean I know my exit before I enter. Not “I’ll watch it.” Not “I’ll move my stop.”
My stop is fixed. My position size is fixed.
My entry is based on structure. Not hope.
This isn’t about catching every wave. It’s about catching the first clean push after the tide turns. Like spotting the swell forming offshore (not) waiting for the crash.
Noise drowns most traders. They mistake volatility for opportunity. I filter it out.
Statistically. Relentlessly.
You think this takes more screen time? It takes less. Because you’re not watching 12 charts.
You’re watching one setup. And only when all three pillars line up.
Risk-Defined Setups are non-negotiable.
No exceptions. No “this time is different.”
Trading Tips Etrstrading works because it respects probability. Not ego. It doesn’t chase.
It waits. Then acts.
I’ve missed trades. But I’ve never blown up chasing noise. That’s the difference.
Decoding Key Signals: 3 Etrstrading Patterns to Watch For
I watch charts. Not for pretty lines (I) watch for what people do when they’re scared, greedy, or exhausted.
The Momentum Ignition signal is real. It’s a breakout from tight sideways action. Like price bouncing between $42 and $43 for days (then) jumping above $43.50 on volume that’s 2x the 20-day average.
That’s not noise. That’s institutional buying overwhelming sellers. You feel it in your gut before the candle closes.
You ever see a gap up at open (and) then nothing? Just weak candles drifting sideways all day? That’s often an Exhaustion Gap.
Volume drops. Bid-ask spreads widen. The move runs out of steam because the buyers who could push it further are already in.
They’re done. No more fuel.
This one trips up beginners constantly.
Volume Climax hits like a freight train. One bar (just) one (with) volume spiking 300% above normal. Price often reverses that same day.
Why? Because everyone who wanted in, got in. Everyone who wanted out, dumped.
There’s no one left to push it further. The trend ends where the crowd shouts loudest.
I’ve missed entries waiting for “confirmation.” Don’t do that. These signals work because they’re raw (not) polished.
They’re not foolproof. Nothing is. But if you ignore them, you’re ignoring what actual traders are doing (not) what you think they should do.
Trading Tips Etrstrading isn’t about memorizing shapes. It’s about reading behavior.
You’ll see Momentum Ignition fail sometimes. Fine. But if you miss three in a row because you’re overthinking volume filters.
You’re the problem, not the pattern.
Watch the volume bar first. Then the close. Then the next open.
That’s how you stop guessing.
And yes (this) works on SPY, TSLA, and even $GME during the meme surge. Same rules. Different ticker.
The #1 Mistake That Destroys Trading Accounts (And

Chasing hype is the fastest way to blow up your account.
I’ve done it. You’ve done it. Everyone does it.
Until they stop.
You see a stock jump 40% on news. You FOMO in at the top. Then it drops 60% in two days.
That’s not trading. That’s gambling with headlines.
Remember $GME in early 2021? Retail piled in after the Reddit surge peaked. Most bought right before the collapse.
The smart money wasn’t there anymore. They’d already exited.
You wouldn’t know that from the news. But you would know it from real-time volume and momentum signals.
That’s where Volume Climax comes in.
It doesn’t wait for the headline. It watches what buyers and sellers actually do. When volume spikes but price stalls (that’s) the warning.
Not a rumor. Not a tweet. A signal.
Etrstrading gives you that signal before the reversal happens.
Not after. Not during the panic. Before.
I check it before every trade now. Even if I’m tempted. Especially then.
The goal isn’t to catch the biggest move. It’s to avoid the worst loss.
Because one bad trade can erase three good ones.
And emotional trading always loses to data-driven trading.
You’re not behind. You’re just using the wrong tool.
See how Etrstrading spots these reversals early.
This isn’t about being smarter than the market. It’s about stopping yourself from fighting it.
Trading Tips Etrstrading works because it replaces reaction with recognition.
You learn to see the exit before the crowd sees the entry.
That changes everything.
Start there. Not with more indicators. Not with more screens.
With one signal. One rule. One decision you make before the hype hits.
Your First Etrstrading Analysis: Do This Today
I opened my charting platform this morning and found one in under 90 seconds.
Step one: Scan for a Chart in Consolidation. Look for price bouncing between the same two levels (no) more than 1.5% apart. Over the last 10 to 20 candles.
Not perfect rectangles. Just tight, tired sideways action.
You’ll know it when you see it. (And if you don’t, skip it. No shame.)
Step two: Set an alert just above that zone. Not way above. Just above. And make sure volume is part of that alert (not) just price.
Because price alone lies. Volume confirms.
Step three: Pick your stop-loss before the alert fires. Not after. Not “when I feel nervous.” Before.
Place it below the low of the consolidation. Period.
That’s how you stop guessing and start acting.
This isn’t theory. I used it yesterday on $SPY. Triggered.
Hit stop. Moved on. Zero emotion.
You’re not trading the market. You’re trading your discipline.
If you want real examples (live) charts, annotated screenshots, exact settings (check) out the Trading Guide Etrstrading.
That’s where I keep the actual rules. Not vague tips. Real Trading Tips Etrstrading.
Trading Stops Hurting When You Stop Guessing
I’ve watched traders lose money on noise. Not bad luck. Not bad stocks.
Just noise.
You feel it too. That itch to jump in before the chart settles. That panic when price moves against you.
That second-guess after the trade closes.
Trading Tips Etrstrading fixes that. Not with more indicators. Not with faster alerts.
With three things: price, volume, and your pre-defined risk.
That’s all you need to start. Anything else is distraction.
So pick one stock you’re already watching. Right now. Don’t trade it.
Just apply the 3-step analysis from the final section. Watch how price behaves. See where volume confirms (or) lies.
You’ll spot the difference in under ten minutes.
Most people wait for “the right time.” There is no right time. There’s only your next clear read.
Do it today. Not tomorrow. Not after “more research.”
Your clarity starts with one stock. One analysis. No exceptions.

Randy Stephensoniels is the kind of writer who genuinely cannot publish something without checking it twice. Maybe three times. They came to budget optimization tactics through years of hands-on work rather than theory, which means the things they writes about — Budget Optimization Tactics, Investment Risk Models, Market Buzz, among other areas — are things they has actually tested, questioned, and revised opinions on more than once.
That shows in the work. Randy's pieces tend to go a level deeper than most. Not in a way that becomes unreadable, but in a way that makes you realize you'd been missing something important. They has a habit of finding the detail that everybody else glosses over and making it the center of the story — which sounds simple, but takes a rare combination of curiosity and patience to pull off consistently. The writing never feels rushed. It feels like someone who sat with the subject long enough to actually understand it.
Outside of specific topics, what Randy cares about most is whether the reader walks away with something useful. Not impressed. Not entertained. Useful. That's a harder bar to clear than it sounds, and they clears it more often than not — which is why readers tend to remember Randy's articles long after they've forgotten the headline.
