If you’re a trader who idly waits for an opportune moment to enter a trade base on instinct, you are bound to lose money. This is true even if you’re using an indicator that only shows entry signals. As demonstrated in this video by Day Trade to Win’s John Paul, it’s critical to know where your target should be and when / where to exit the trade if your target is not hit. Over the long term, you are minimizing risk. Long term minimized risk increases your accuracy, and therefore, profit margin.
What trading system provides you with entries AND has a complete follow-through method attached for trade management? The Atlas Line. After an entry signal appears (as heard by the doorbell sound in the video) with green (long order) or red (short order) text, you are given a direction to trade into. This is usually supplied early enough to allow for fills. Next, it’s a matter of watching the trade. Using three stops, you will have a satisfactory safety net in case price turns around unexpectedly. Since the Atlas Line’s internal algorithm is highly accurate, there’s always a greater chance of price heading to your target. Traders often short-change themselves by placing a target too close to the current price or have unreasonable expectations of grandeur. By using the ATR (Average True Range), Atlas Line users always place stops within reason – based on current market conditions.
If you want to find out how you can trade responsibly with consistent results, give the Atlas Line a shot. It’s highly recommended.

Perhaps the biggest mistake a newbie trader can make is jumping into an live account with a broker before practicing. Trading platforms like NinjaTrader offer a way to simulate the live trading environment using actual live data (often through leading brokerages). This is as close to live trading one can come without subjecting real money to risk. For NinjaTrader, there are quite a few free live data feed options: the Zen-Fire data feed from Mirus, the Rithmic / Vision feed from Optimus Trading Group and the CQG feed from Global Futures, to name a few. Each feed is quite close when comparing speed and fills, although feed uptime and access costs can differ between brokerages. Many brokerages will pay for the feed, charging only the round-turn fee. Keep in mind that each data feed may have a different expiry period. Whatever feed you decide, consider testing multiple markets on consecutive days to see if there is any missing data, both real-time and historically.
Ever look at a chart to see if there’s any pattern in the candles, OHLCs, or boxes? Perhaps the best way to go about recognizing any such pattern is to look for support and resistance levels. These are areas in which price plateaus or ceases to fall through. Correlating these levels to a useable measurement such as price increments, trader psychology, news events is only half the challenge. The other half is ensuring these patterns occur frequently and profitably enough.