 Steve Rhodes, Steve Rhodes, the author of Mastering Probability, Steve, you are there, right? I am. I hear you loud and clear. Are you today, Basil? I'm well. Thank you. And how are you? Good, good. So the Boston Marathon took place today, I believe, right? And I think the guy who won averaged 13 miles an hour in running for 26 miles. I mean, are you a runner? Are you a jogger? I know you're a big tennis player. I'm a sprinter. That was my thing when I was in high school. I was fortunate to have some records running as a senior under 16 and they they were held for about 10 years. Oh, cool. Yeah. And they were actually under 16. And then because of that, it was also the under 18 and open. So although I ran under 16, they were faster than the under 18 and open. Was that in South Africa or was that in South Africa? Yes, South Africa. Oh, that's cool. Can you imagine running on average 13 miles an hour? And I was looking last night, there are sprinters today that are doing times. It's just unbelievable what's going on in athletics. I love that the fact that people are so interested in sprinting and long distance, you know, the times where it goes in and out of favor, but right now it's very exciting. Roger Bannister, he was the guy that first broke the four minute mile. I ran in a meet. Did you really? He was a guest at that, I ran from my province as a high schooler. He was the guest for the club that day that I ran. So I actually got to see him. I didn't meet him, but I got to see him. Yeah. He's the one guy, so you figure for years, people tried to break the four minute mile. In fact, the day that he did it, and this is what I read, so I didn't talk to him personally or anything, but the day that he was going to run, that he actually broke the four minute mile, the wind was going the wrong way and he was thinking of not running. But he ran and he broke the four minute mile. And then within a year, I don't remember the exact number, but 10 or 15 or 20 guys, once they saw it, they knew that they could do it. Isn't that crazy? That's human nature. That's human nature. That's the same. I remember the 10 second, 100, and all of a sudden, people always aspire to the next level. I love that. I'm going to ask you, what about the market? I think people don't want to hear about what I've done. They want to know, what are you talking about in the market? But Basil, that's the lead-in because it's all about emotion. It's all about emotions. And so, if I were to do today's segment, just to discuss the cycle of emotions, kind of take, for example, and we've all experienced this, we've all seen this in the stock charts from going from euphoria to actually raising the red flag and calling it quits. So in a market like this, you were talking about the Middle East War. It's been going on for thousands of years, although it's a bit more serious at this stage of the game. How do you trade through those emotions? And for me, it's really about pattern recognition for you. It's about pattern recognition. So you share with us a set of tools that works for you, that has created success. I do the same thing. And so for me, that boils down to really knowing about five or six different things. Where is support and resistance? To me, that's the very first thing when I'm taking a look at what a stock chart is doing. And then it's about being able to identify, is there a top or a bottom pattern? For me, I like to use the TD9s, the Roadsman Dominicator, buy and sell the D point, the A to B equal CD, and wave number seven brought to us by none other than you, Basil Chapman. So if we take a look at gold and silver, so what I want to share with folks right now, because this is about support and resistance, is that gold and silver are attempting to form new task market profiles. Task market profiles, folks, they help me to identify objectively support and resistance. Now, I say they're attempting to form basil because I use this little advanced tool that identifies them as they're forming. They don't always form. For example, the one in silver. So I took a snapshot of this chart just before we came on the air, maybe about 10 minutes, five minutes before we came on the air. And the profile that I have for silver is actually vanished. Doesn't mean that it won't come back and be there at 601 this evening. But let me share with folks, at least for the gold and silver, at least for gold, I now have resistance at 2400. And I've got support at 231870. And we'll see in a few moments here why that's so important to understand. The silver resistance level was up at 2885 and support was at 27, between 2745 and 2780. So that's shown on these charts here. And I'm just looking at the upper left-hand side, gold and silver. And gold still has what I refer to as a sell the D point pattern. That would be negated if price were to close today above 2384.50. But the reason why these task market profiles are so important is they can help us, they can help traders, they can help investors understand when there's a change in trend for that timeframe. So this happens to be a daily timeframe chart for gold. And it shows that new potential profile that is attempting to form. And so if we just simply go back to January 17th, that's a lower left-hand side of my chart, that was when when price closed below the bottom of profile, that says it's broken through support. And that generates a change in trend, a profile change in trend signal. We can see here as we follow gold from the 17th till the end of January, price has spiked up and it spiked right up into the top of that profile. So it never cleared resistance. If you don't clear resistance, resistance is resistance, you're either going to consolidate or move lower. And that's in fact what gold did here. And what gold did was it formed a bottom. When it formed the bottom, it was a TD9 cow bottom. And that was at the 2016-30 level. And that was back in the early part of February. Then what happened, Basil, is we get a profile change in trend where my cursor's at this nice green bar that closes above the top of the profile. So that gave us a real signal. If you weren't familiar with what the bottom pattern was back here, the road's meant to mitigate a signal, you certainly knew that gold had changed its trend. If you were short, you would say that's probably not the right position to be in, at least from a daily timeframe. When price broke through that area, Basil went up and it formed this little TD9 count top. And that TD9 count top led to a sideways move. We never saw price close below the bottom of the profile. So it was just a top. And a top says to me that price should go down and explore support. Can it hold support? In this case here, gold never got down to that level. And that TD9 count top actually ended up failing. And it failed when price closed back above the top of that daily profile. About five, six days ago, we got a TD9 count top on the daily timeframe. And that ended up being negated on Friday, as a matter of fact. But there was also another top. And that's the sell the D point pattern. That's a pattern that was talked to us by Larry Pesventu, who learned it from H.M. Gartley. And it's a great tool and a great pattern. So that pattern is still out there. But if gold were to close above 2384.50, that pattern gets negated. It says all it would say, Basil, is I don't have a topping signal. We still might have price trading within his profile, 2400 again at the top, 2318, 70 at the bottom. And I'll have tomorrow, if people turn in, tune in to the Trader's Ed Show at 11 o'clock, they'll know whether these profiles have taken hold or not. So it's all about emotions about being able to identify tops and bottoms out there. Now, if we switch over and take a look at the daily NQ chart, the daily NQ chart, this is the first time that it's closing below the bottom of its profile, which is an 18163. So what we know right now is we have a profile change in trend inside of the NQ. It also negated a TD9 count bottom. But here's an A to B equal CD pattern. So this says that price made the one to one level. That doesn't mean it's a buy. We wait for bullish reversal candles to confirm a bottom. If 17861 doesn't hold, then we're going to be looking at 17682 we're there about. So I see we're about to run out of time. So tune in tomorrow just to see where those gold and silver profiles are at. Thank you so much, Steve. That's a great analysis and we all appreciate it. And folks, mastering probability, check it out, Steve's terrific work. Thank you very much, Steve. Have a great rest of the day. Take care, Basil. Thanks. Thank you very much. So folks, just as we're going to the break with Dow is down 258 and we're looking at this to be down 63. We'll be right back. Basil Chapman sitting here for Tom O'Brien. Huge gain potential. But how is an independent trader supposed to scan the entire market looking for these hidden opportunities? One simple answer, the opening call newsletter. Basil Chapman, developer of the Chapman wave trading methodology, has been trading the markets for longer than most trading influencers have been alive. And over that time, he has honed his methodology in order to accurately call movements in a wide range of equities from semiconductors to uranium to key indices and so much more. Basil is old school, taking the time to educate the trader while also giving his insights into key indices, selective stocks and more. Opening call subscribers also receive access to dozens of educational live streams that can be accessed at any time for your edification. 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