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Owned by Fawaz

Funded Trader Community

24 members • Free

Helping new traders learn day trading and the steps to get funded with prop firm capital through education and discipline.

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Skoolers

189.7k members • Free

17 contributions to Funded Trader Community
Chart Patterns
Chart Patterns (Day Trading Basics) Chart patterns are visual formations created by price movements on a chart. Traders use these patterns to identify potential trends, reversals, or continuation of price direction. Common patterns like triangles, flags, head and shoulders, and double tops can help traders anticipate possible market moves and plan entries or exits. Understanding these patterns is a key skill for day traders because they reflect the psychology of buyers and sellers in the market. To see how these patterns actually form and how to trade them, watch the video below for a full breakdown. 📈
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Candlestick Patterns
Too many traders memorize candlestick patterns like they’re cheat codes, but the real purpose of candlesticks is understanding who is in control of the market at that moment. Every candle represents a fight between buyers and sellers, and the structure of that candle tells you whether momentum is strengthening, weakening, or about to shift. When you truly understand this, you stop gambling on entries and start reading intention. Candlestick patterns matter because they help you recognize exhaustion after aggressive moves, hesitation before reversals, and confirmation when a trend is healthy. They improve timing, prevent emotional chasing, and add logic to your execution. But patterns alone don’t make a trader profitable — they only become powerful when combined with market structure, key levels, patience, and strict risk management. I’ve included a video below that will help you better understand how candlestick patterns actually form and how to read them properly. Study it carefully, focus on the psychology behind the candles, and train your eye to see behavior instead of guessing direction. That shift alone can change how you approach every trade. was this video helpful?
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Candlestick Anatomy
A candlestick is the visual language of the market. Every single candle tells a story about the battle between buyers and sellers within a specific time frame. Each candlestick has four key data points: - Open - High - Low - Close This is called OHLC. Now let’s break down the anatomy: The body of the candle is the thick part. It shows the difference between the open and close. - If the candle closes above the open → it’s usually green or white → buyers were in control. - If it closes below the open → it’s red or black → sellers were in control. The wicks (or shadows) are the thin lines above and below the body. They show the highest and lowest price reached during that time period. - The top wick shows how high price went before sellers pushed it back down. - The bottom wick shows how low price went before buyers stepped in and pushed it up. Long wicks = rejection. Big bodies = strong momentum. Small bodies = indecision. When you learn to read candlesticks, you stop guessing and start understanding the psychology behind price movement. It’s not just a shape on a chart — it’s emotion, pressure, fear, and confidence printed in real time. Master the candle. Master the story. Did you find this video Helpful?
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A Must Read!!!
Read This If You’re Early in Your Trading Journey There was a time when I was driving Uber, working long hours, staring at my phone between rides, wondering how people were actually changing their lives through the charts. I wasn’t special. I wasn’t rich. I didn’t have insider knowledge. I just had a decision: either stay where I was, or commit to learning something that could change my future. What most people don’t tell you is this — it took me five full years of losses before I became profitable. Five years of frustration. Doubt. Blowing accounts. Questioning myself. Wanting to quit more times than I can count. And here’s the truth that changed everything for me: 👉 Day trading is not about strategies. It’s about psychology. The market doesn’t beat traders — traders beat themselves. Overtrading. Revenge trading. Fear of missing out. Fear of being wrong. Lack of patience. That’s why if I could give ONE piece of advice to any beginner, it would be this: Master your psychology before you try to master the charts. Build a system rooted in: - Risk management - Discipline - Consistency - Patience One trade doesn’t matter. One day doesn’t matter. Who you become over time does. This journey is hard. There’s no way around it. You’re going to feel alone sometimes. You’re going to feel behind. You’re going to question if this is even for you. But let me remind you of something important: If the person next to you can do this… what makes you think you can’t? They’re human. They feel fear. They feel doubt. They’ve failed too. The only difference is they didn’t quit. So don’t give up — not on the bad days, not after the losses, not when it feels slow. Because the market doesn’t reward talent. It rewards those who stay long enough to grow. If you’re here, you’re already ahead. Stay locked in. Stay patient. Your time will come. What do you struggle with the MOST in trading right now? 👇 Vote below, then comment ONE sentence on what you’re working on fixing this month.
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0 likes • Feb 6
@Amer Shuby over trading is what destroys 95% of new day traders. Keep it up, build a system and you got this.
Order Types, Bid/Ask & Why You’re Getting Bad Fills
Most beginners lose money before the trade even starts — not because their idea was bad, but because they don’t understand how orders work. This lesson is going to save you money immediately. 1️⃣ What Is an Order? An order is simply how you tell the market what you want to do: - Buy - Sell - Exit - Protect yourself But how you send that order matters more than you think. 2️⃣ Market Orders (Fast but Dangerous) A market order means: “Get me in RIGHT NOW at whatever price is available.” Pros - Instant entry - Guaranteed fill Cons - Slippage - Terrible during volatility - You don’t control price 👉 Beginners love market orders 👉 Professionals use them only when speed matters If you’re using market orders during news or high volatility, you’re basically saying: “I don’t care how bad the fill is.” 3️⃣ Limit Orders (Controlled & Professional) A limit order means: “I will ONLY buy or sell at this exact price or better.” Pros - Full price control - No surprise fills - Cleaner execution Cons - You might not get filled This is what disciplined traders use most of the time. 4️⃣ Stop Orders (Protection, Not Entry Toys) A stop order activates only after price hits a level. Used for: - Stop losses - Breakout entries (advanced) Key rule: ❌ Stops are NOT suggestions ✅ Stops are NON-NEGOTIABLE protection If you move your stop every time you’re wrong — you’re not trading, you’re hoping. 5️⃣ Bid & Ask (The Hidden Cost Nobody Explains) Every chart has two prices: - Bid = what buyers are willing to pay - Ask = what sellers want The difference is the spread. You buy at the ask You sell at the bid Wide spread = instant disadvantage Tight spread = cleaner trading 👉 This is why low-volume stocks destroy beginners. 6️⃣ Why Beginners Get “Robbed” on Fills Common rookie mistakes: - Trading illiquid stocks - Market ordering during volatility - Ignoring the spread - Entering emotional instead of planned
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Fawaz Alnajar
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9points to level up
@fawaz-alnajar-5754
Helping futures traders pass and keep prop firm accounts through discipline, risk management, and rule-based execution.

Active 9h ago
Joined Feb 1, 2026