Does that mean you bought at 13526 or sold at 13526 and how many units did you trade?
I took the trade from the top of these latest 3 pushes down (on demo because I was traveling)
here.
One (0.5) Nikkei sell contract cashed out in 3 parts as we approached the floor.
Does that mean you bought/will buy at 13600 or sold/will sell at 13600 and how many units did you/will you trade?
Does that mean you bought at 13428 or sold at 13428 and how many units did you trade?
neither at this point. I would short it if it runs up to the pink circle and sets up the short, or I would possibly go long from a stoprun setup at 13438 or maybe much lower.
this depends if the floor fails, or just looks like it's going to, then takes everybody's money at inflated spreads at the turn and heads up again, if it does, I would take that one, but if its going lower, I would only short if I can get in safely, at the trendline,
after seeing the manipulation (robbery)

What does that even mean?
to understand what I am talking about here it is essential to picture yourself as a trader. you are watching either the upper downtrend line I have circled or the lower line 13438 and have a directional view.
lets focus on traders looking at the descending trendline on this example?
What do the numbers "1" "2" and "3" mean?
Push 1, (pause), Push 2, (pause) Push 3. The 3 push cycle that runs everywhere, all the time, and at all timescales throughout all markets. except Bitcoin.
Why do you have red blue and green arrows?
Red is an expected downmove, Blue an expected upmove. the Green arrow is labeling only
What does "due one bounce so most likely is" mean?
the 3 push cycle goes 1, 2, 3 ...
1 (the other way - the expected bounce) 1.. 2, 3 etc
What does "retail breakout traders stops here" mean?
back to the descending grey trendline. retail traders are trying to work out whether it going to break out of this triangle caused by trendline and the "floor" upwards or downwards. at that trendline you will have 2 types of traders.
those who believe price is going up will be buying as the price pushes upwards and their stoploss will be below their buy point somewhere. that stoploss is a sell order
there are also those who think it is going down from that trendline and shorting from there, their stoploss will be above that trendline somewhere and is a "BUY" order, and the 10% winners want to
sell to as many "buys" as possible, before the move starts
so say this camp are divided into 2 equal factions, then chance says that 50% of them are going to win that bet, no? the
stats however say that 90% will lose it.
here is why.