NQ Futures Review & Commentary \ May 27, 2026

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qf5qokimwO4

Here’s a concise summary of the livestream:

– Focus: Review of the NASDAQ/ES daily charts and a live intraday example showing how the speaker reads price action to identify short opportunities even inside a primary bull market.
– Instruments & accounts: Recommends micro contracts for small or inexperienced accounts (and for prop-firm trading) to reduce risk and size.

– Market context: Predicted a post‑May rally after taking out relative highs, then identified a specific daily volume‑imbalance area that would act as a magnet for price and a likely place for a short‑term reversal.

– Key technical concepts taught: read the open/high/low/close, spot volume imbalances, fair‑value gaps (and inversion FVGs), “consequent encroachment” and inefficiencies after blowoff runs, and use measured moves/standard‑deviation projections to set targets.

– Trade rules and mindset: prefer short setups that show quick, one‑direction fills of inefficiencies; use fulcrum/measure moves and -2 SD projections for precision; accept being stopped if overleveraged is avoided; novices (<~1–2 years) should favor longs in a bull market.

– Execution example: identified an intraday fair‑value gap and volume imbalance, entered a short around the open with a built‑in buffer, saw a clean drop to the target but missed some of the larger move—used the experience as intel.

– Warnings and advice: don’t rely on “gimmicks” or paid holy‑grail claims; develop price‑reading language/discipline; keep capital and living expenses in reserve (two years, ~$100k suggested) before trading full‑time.

– Operational note: will reduce public real‑time detail in future live trading to avoid influencing other traders’ orders; continues to teach concepts and critique poor mentorships.

Main takeaway: focus on clean price‑action reading (open/high/low/close, volume imbalances, fair‑value gaps), manage risk and position size, gain experience before aggressively shorting into a bull market, and use measured projections to plan entries and targets.

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