Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

ICC Lab

12 members • Free

The Vault

26.5k members • Free

The Trading Cafe

91.4k members • Free

Scale Amazon FBA Community

21.5k members • Free

Royale Business Academy

69.6k members • Free

1 contribution to ICC Lab
Movement Is Not Indication
Gold can move fast and still tell you nothing. That is one of the hardest lessons for new ICC traders to accept. A big candle feels important. A sharp push feels urgent. A violent move feels like the market is screaming, “Get in now.” But movement by itself is not Indication. Movement is not proof. A candle is not a story. In ICC, Indication is not just price moving up or down. Indication is the market showing its hand. It is the first meaningful sign that control may be shifting. It is the moment where price does something with enough force, structure, and consequence that you have a real reason to pay attention. That means we do not call every bullish push an Indication. We do not call every bearish candle an Indication. We do not chase the first aggressive move just because it looks clean in the moment. Gold is notorious for this. Gold will spike. Gold will sweep. Gold will run stops. Gold will print emotional candles. Gold will bait buyers at highs and sellers at lows. Gold will move just far enough to make you believe something is happening, then snap back and punish late entries. That is why ICC requires more than movement. A true Indication should leave evidence. It should show displacement. It should break something that matters. It should create structural consequence. It should make the previous behavior look weaker. It should give you a reason to believe the market may be changing direction or continuing with real intent. If all you have is a big candle, you do not have a full trade idea. You have movement. And movement is not enough. The question is not, “Did Gold move?” The question is: Did Gold break structure with authority? Did the candle have displacement, or was it just a fast emotional wick? Did price attack liquidity first? Did the move create a clear shift in control? Did it leave behind a level of interest for correction? Did the next reaction respect the move or immediately erase it? That is where discipline begins. Because the trader who chases movement is trading emotion.
Movement Is Not Indication
1 like • 1d
Looking forward to learning and growing as a day trader with this strategy. From this read alone I can see ima learn alot.
1-1 of 1
Greg Thomas
1
4points to level up
@greg-thomas-2348
#RBA

Active 20h ago
Joined May 12, 2026
Powered by