Usually the breaker will fail, and it becomes a reclaimed order block and continuation (if price is still heading for main liquidity). There will be short term consolidation from around the initial OB (future BB) then price first breaks below, then breaks back above and captures liquidity from the other side then continues after breaking back below the initial OB (failed BB) but first digs back up into it, reclaiming it. SM usually targets engineers liquidity with some type of consolidation then targets both sides (taking liquidity from buyers and sellers, stopping buyers out then stopping sellers out and targeting new buy stops and continues below). This is more consistent than the breaker. It’s like the short term Judas swing that happens everywhere. After the second sweep (appearing as a MSS but isn’t), price must close back down through the initial OB that began the first sweep from inside the initial consolidation that’s the confirmation, then price comes back inside the OB reclaiming it where you can enter a sell (in this scenario) and SM continues plan of action from the exact price point (OB/failed BB/now reclaimed OB) it started from. When you think there is a MSS, and identified a breaker block, wait for the breaker to fail, but candles must close below it first before digging back up into it then dropping. Otherwise it likely leaves a Mohawk with the wicks and the BB is still valid. If the BB fails and you get a clear close below it, wait for price to come back into it and sell. And vice versa for buy. Backtest this and thank me later. You’re welcome. Make sure the initial OB is INSIDE the short term consolidation range, if it’s outside of it, it’s not the source of the sweeps (Judas move). It must be inside, and that will be the source and price where SM want to keep selling from but first need to trip both sides for more liquidity, then they can continue shorting successfully from the same price. Many times the OB (that gets reclaimed) is in the form of a wick. If you see the bearish candle that first breaks below before it comes back up and breaks above (then back down again to continue), at the top of this candle (INSIDE the range/consolidation), there will be a bullish wick on top of it, THAT is the transaction that caused and initiates this Judas move. The candle before it will likely also be part of the order block, but you want the very last transaction for best accuracy and precision. Extend a rectangle from it and wait for price to come back above (you’ll think it’s a breaker), then wait for price to break and close back below it and name it “reclaimed OB”. Then sell right as price is coming back up into it, then price will continue down and you drawdown will be little to none and straight into profit. Don’t be scared to sell while price is coming up. As long as it’s up inside the failed BB, it’s now like old support becoming resistance except it’s literally the exact price point smart money manipulated from so they can sell from it. Excuse my vocab
A breaker is an order block that fails (so the price pushes past it) & then it’s retested from the other side. Think of it as a bearish order block failing & then acting as support or a bullish order block failing & then acting as resistance later on.
Breaker blocks is not 1 candle. Its the series of up or down close candle. His examples just had 1 up and down close candle b4 the shift in price delivery
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Usually the breaker will fail, and it becomes a reclaimed order block and continuation (if price is still heading for main liquidity). There will be short term consolidation from around the initial OB (future BB) then price first breaks below, then breaks back above and captures liquidity from the other side then continues after breaking back below the initial OB (failed BB) but first digs back up into it, reclaiming it. SM usually targets engineers liquidity with some type of consolidation then targets both sides (taking liquidity from buyers and sellers, stopping buyers out then stopping sellers out and targeting new buy stops and continues below). This is more consistent than the breaker. It’s like the short term Judas swing that happens everywhere. After the second sweep (appearing as a MSS but isn’t), price must close back down through the initial OB that began the first sweep from inside the initial consolidation that’s the confirmation, then price comes back inside the OB reclaiming it where you can enter a sell (in this scenario) and SM continues plan of action from the exact price point (OB/failed BB/now reclaimed OB) it started from.
When you think there is a MSS, and identified a breaker block, wait for the breaker to fail, but candles must close below it first before digging back up into it then dropping. Otherwise it likely leaves a Mohawk with the wicks and the BB is still valid. If the BB fails and you get a clear close below it, wait for price to come back into it and sell. And vice versa for buy. Backtest this and thank me later. You’re welcome.
Make sure the initial OB is INSIDE the short term consolidation range, if it’s outside of it, it’s not the source of the sweeps (Judas move). It must be inside, and that will be the source and price where SM want to keep selling from but first need to trip both sides for more liquidity, then they can continue shorting successfully from the same price.
Many times the OB (that gets reclaimed) is in the form of a wick. If you see the bearish candle that first breaks below before it comes back up and breaks above (then back down again to continue), at the top of this candle (INSIDE the range/consolidation), there will be a bullish wick on top of it, THAT is the transaction that caused and initiates this Judas move. The candle before it will likely also be part of the order block, but you want the very last transaction for best accuracy and precision. Extend a rectangle from it and wait for price to come back above (you’ll think it’s a breaker), then wait for price to break and close back below it and name it “reclaimed OB”. Then sell right as price is coming back up into it, then price will continue down and you drawdown will be little to none and straight into profit. Don’t be scared to sell while price is coming up. As long as it’s up inside the failed BB, it’s now like old support becoming resistance except it’s literally the exact price point smart money manipulated from so they can sell from it.
Excuse my vocab
Good insight!
Would you be able to drop a video on this sir?
@@spraycheese5I can certainly try. I won’t talk in it though, but will put text in it as I go through each step on the charts
@@deedevs Subscribed!
Thank you for all the time you spend teaching us!
Do you guys use breakers for your trade entries?🤔
yep i use this as confluence, a great tool in the box
Excellent!
Love your content 👌
Glad you enjoy it!
Nicely simplified.
What is the difference between orderblock and breaker bloke??
A breaker is an order block that fails (so the price pushes past it) & then it’s retested from the other side.
Think of it as a bearish order block failing & then acting as support or a bullish order block failing & then acting as resistance later on.
@@mattsacha thanks
Once upon a time I commented on a video of this channel that you'll reach 100k before BTC. It really came true😅
No way! You spoke it into reality then😎
Hey would love to take a in depth course on day trading any recommendations?
Wha time frames are more successful using this strategy?
Love you video Matt most valuable content you are every time provide to us thank you
I appreciate it :)
Dude, which currency pair would you suggests to the beginners?
It’s personal preference based on the trade session you wish to trade but you can’t go wrong with EURUSD or GBPUSD.
@@mattsacha tq bro
So basically it's an orderblock in a change of charackter (Choch) am I right?
Pls does breaker block need inducement before mitigation?
It doesn’t but it helps if it does
Is it similar to the way an fvg occurs after a liquidity grab?
Yes
Breaker blocks is not 1 candle. Its the series of up or down close candle. His examples just had 1 up and down close candle b4 the shift in price delivery
This is also the Quasimodo too
This is matigation block
Cool
Next
It’s not ICT, it’s price action smh, stop overcomplicating things
Or more simplified: Head & Shoulder
That’s wrong !