 tech issue right before, so it threw me off for a split second. So first and foremost, to all my traders out there, everyone outside of Cybertrading University and of course my students that are joining me here today, thank you so much for your participation first and foremost. Hey, again, my name is Josh Levitin for anyone unfamiliar. I'm tagging in for the great Fausto Puglisi here today, but you're in great hands though. I've been trading with him and being trained by him for the last 10 years. So with that said, it gives me a good chance to share my experience with you, not just over those last 10 years, but how I can best translate that into what you see in front of you today and in front of the live market. My biggest focal point when it comes to trading is really the preparation behind it. So, you know, at least when it comes to even doing a webinar, you have to be very prepared, structured, knowing what you're going to be talking about. Well, today, folks, we're going to be talking about a few different stocks. But first and foremost, I want to do a quick introduction just for anyone that's unfamiliar, not just with Cybertrading University, but perhaps even myself. So again, I am an experienced stock trader trained by Fausto Puglisi back from 2014. Fausto being one of the original So's bandits, one of the original day traders back in the early 90s. So it gave him great experience dealing with, you know, things like the dot-com bubble, things like the 08 recession and crisis from there, obviously, as I have recently with COVID and, you know, the pandemic that we saw, the big spike down, and then the extreme slingshot backup that we found. So with that said, you know, it gives me a lot of experience with that. But, you know, lately, aside from the small cap stocks that I have been mainly focused around, my bigger focal point probably over the last 8 to 10 months had been stocks like Tesla, AMD, Coinbase as well. So we're going to be mixing around a few different trades here between these small cap stocks and some of the larger cap, you know, blue chip stocks that a lot of us are perhaps familiar with at least here. So you could follow us on our social media streams at least here at CybertradingU, that being across the board for YouTube and X being Twitter. Otherwise, you can go right to our website here at CybertradingUniversity.com. And with that, let's just jump right to it here. So what I want to do actually here is just show my live trading platform. And I'm going to bring book map into this here just for a little bit. So what I want to do is go into a few different trades. So, namely today, I was focused on AMD. I know a lot of us were focused on NVIDIA with their earnings coming out later this week. I just feel that NVIDIA, you're going to see a lot of hesitation prior to their earnings, a lot of consolidation. Easy to say that, looking at what's in front of you here. But, you know, hey, AMD is a stock, at least personally. I have a lot of experience with, I'm very familiar with, much before the last 8 to 10 months back from 2015 and 16, I was swing trading AMD. And with that, I have a couple of lines here that I could share with you, but it's all based off of book map. It's all based off of the heat map and all of the other programs and tools that come with it here. So the only thing that I cannot show here just because I don't have the data to pull from book map, I probably can, but it may just kind of give my computer some complications to go back to Friday's trading. I just want to show this here. This is just the daily candle from Friday the 17th. And you have this close price, not just the close from this past week on Friday, or the day on Friday, but you have the entire week at being at 120 and 62 cents. So there's going to be a large transaction that pops up at the end of the day. And on book map, you would see that represented by a larger dot, whether it be red or green. In fact, I could probably go a step further here and show that on the actual time in sales. But, you know, actually here at the close and as well as at the market open for each and every day, you're going to see a lot of these dots pop up. And with that right here, market close price, this is representing over 1.4 million shares that were filled. That's not just, you know, one person or two people, you know, that's a conglomerate of orders that are meant to be filled at that price. Well, our whole philosophy at Cybertrading University is to follow the big money. So we're going to get into the heat map. We're going to get into this morning and the opening bell print, the big dot on book map at 9.30 this morning. But it's just to say, for 1.4, nearly 1.5 million shares, that was filled pretty much right here, right around 120, 62 cents. So let me just actually fix this line a bit here. I'll just have us focus on this yellow or on this white line for right now. Hey, right away before I even bring book map into the equation, I think that we could all see what's in front of us again. And it's to say, well, hey, this morning, this exact price, the close from Friday, this big 1.4 million share closing print, which you would see on book map, this became support, not just once, but actually twice just a little while back here now. This is where I'll bring the heat map, obviously, and book map into the equation here. So it depends on when you really open up your platform, set yourself up to trade. I never tell any of our students to, you know, be at their desk at the crack of dawn at 4 AM, 5 AM, 6 AM. You don't need to do that for anyone that does, I commend you. But it's not required. Now, with that said, I would want our students and traders to at least give yourself about an hour's worth of time before the market opens up, before the floodgates open up. You see a rush of volume pour into the market. Hey, it's like studying for a test. You want to make sure that you know at least you cover all bases. You know the answers to the test, essentially, before it's even given out. OK, well, hey, really quick, folks. Where do you see a dark orange line going across the page? I'm going to delete these drawings, at least. But where do we see a dark orange line going across the page? I think it's rather easy for us to kind of see. Well, we have this limit cell order here at $1.21 and $0.55. OK, so that, in its own, is going to be a clear resistance to work off of for today. It's about 30,000 shares, 30,000. OK, now, the way I teach, the way I look to try and train our students here is to say, well, what's a larger size? 30,000 for $1.4 million, you tell me. Now, obviously, we all know the answer to that question, but it's just that, hey, if I'm respecting this, which I am, this is clearly an intentional resistance level that's set here throughout the morning. Limit cell order for about 30,000 shares. It's the largest limit cell, and the second largest limit order out there across the whole pre-market. So that is big. It's at $1.21.55. But again, if that is so big, and if I'm considering that to be strong, then exactly how significant should that closing price be back from Friday the end of last week? All right, so when the market opens up, I do want to just touch upon this, this being what we call the opening bell print. Much like the clothes is created by a conglomerate of orders that are meant to have their order triggered, filled, bought sold, just namely at the open price. So here, book map, it shows $1.2075. Well, that in its own is a huge level to work off of. Again, I think that you could even see it here, and I'll just draw my lines going forward on the heat map. $1.2075 right there. You had the closed price back from the end of last week. That was at $1.20 and $0.62. So if you want even for such an expensive stock, even the closer they are, the better it would be, but this is still pretty fair. It's just that when you have both of those prices within relative arms reach of each other, you could use the combination of them as a range of support or as a range of resistance. Not to go fully into charting and candlesticks and whatnot, but for anyone that follows dogees, well, that means the open and the closed price, these dots are the same actually, same exact price. So I do give a lot of weight with that. So here, you could say, you could kind of say here that the combination of the closed price from Friday and the open price today created a strong support level. It broke over it. It blasted above it here early in the morning. Now it was relatively around the same time as the spy was already breaking higher. And with that, you expect most name brands to at least go with, but it's just that here, once it breaks above resistance and smashes above it, runs off of it, that's where we should expect resistance to become support. So from there, the first test, namely even here, I would consider it to be the best test. It looks like just looking at like a five minute time slice, it closed well above it. So that's pretty strong. Certainly as long as it doesn't break under or nip under it, hold under it, you're looking pretty good as far as seeing that support look to come to fruition. But it's just that, hey, on this trade, what's a little disappointing on this, at least throughout the early morning, thankfully it ended up essentially panning out. You still don't want to get too greedy and try and be a perfectionist. This ended up moving up to the next large order that's out there on the sell side. This had popped up shortly after 9.30 and it got larger throughout the day, throughout the morning. You could see the shade of orange goes from like a lighter orange, yellowish to a darker red issue. Well, that means that there's more volume being placed on the sell side at that price, right? So there, now you can kind of see it being 83,000 and especially as we head into 11 o'clock, if not already at 10.30 Eastern time, oftentimes at that stage in the morning, you should expect reversals or pullbacks, lack of momentum from the original trend that we had. It's not as frequent that we'll tend to see a trade look to continue at the same pace and velocity as it did from the original push. So even if this were to have broken out above 122, if it actually moved up to it, hit it and broke over it, I would have more often expected a false breakout at first like a head fake and then for it to come back down. Much like I said here at 10.30, the first test of this to be support is the best test. The first test of this as resistance is the best test. So it's to say it didn't even touch it, but even if it were to have, you should expect a head fake, a pop and drop and then we'll kind of see what's happening at that stage in the morning. All right, so that was essentially the AMD morning trade that we caught inside our live trading room. It was really off of the closed price back from last Friday and then as well as the open, but nice move essentially level to level. If anyone's following AMD heading into this very afternoon once we jump off this call and then so forth, as of right now, you could see that AMD is holding over the VWAP line. It was pretty choppy around there earlier. So it needs to prove itself as a strong support either by laying over it really cleanly or hell, if this just pops right on up and keeps moving on up closer to that 122 sooner than later, then hey, I'll take that even more so, but that's a bare minimum. This needs to hold over VWAP as support if there's any chance of this trying to make one more pop here this afternoon. All right, with AMD just really quick, last thing on that is just like, with earnings coming out on NVIDIA later on this week, I'm following this as a morning trade, namely, it would be great for AMD to make one more push up here this afternoon, not really expecting it. The market pops, great. But after NVIDIA has their earnings, we'll see a lot more traction across the whole semiconductor market. Obviously, Intel's been a hot trade of late, AMD I'm a big fan of, and so forth. I wanna focus on a small cap stock though, bring a little mix, a little variety here in this webinar. Our primary focus inside our live trading room is the small cap stocks. I have grown accustomed to Tesla and AMD because you could trade the option of it. Now to be a great options trader, you need to be a really great stock trader and that's just what Fausto's trained me from day one. So, here at CDIO, I didn't even care to check the options on this, just it's a small cap stock, more focused in just trading the equity, right? It's a dollar 50 per share. So it's a lot easier for our students, actually I see a few of our students inside this webinar right now. I see Grant, I see Bill right now joining us, Mark, I appreciate you folks alongside all of us right now, but hey, especially for those traders, I just shout it out, they know, it takes like just 500 shares, 1,000 shares, that's not a lot of money being put into this one position. I guess everyone has a different perspective of that, but it's just to say, you could make some quick money trading a smaller cap stock like this. Now, hey, let's be devil's advocate, you could lose a lot of money trading a stock like this. So, let's go over this entire move. I was more focused on AMD this morning and the spy, I did not trade this CDIO. It was called out inside our live trading room, a bunch of our students took advantage of it, I personally did not trade this, so what I will tell you is that more often than not, although it doesn't show it here, this is a little interesting, we'll see if there seems to be resistance popping up, but normally at a 50 cent price level like 150, you'd expect to see that be a big iceberg level, like limit sell level looking at the heat map, otherwise, as I'll show, it could be a nice CVP level, chart volume profile level. Now, throughout the morning, generally it was holding under 152, so you could even say 152 is like the pre-market resistance, that's really strong as a chart level. Okay, let's focus on that. Oh, it might be 53, 53. Well, hey, going into the open, we ended up seeing this pull back, it dropped off, not really a clean move whatsoever within the first five or so minutes. So from there, we ended up seeing a pull back, and that's what happens with a lot of these trades. So really, unless if there is something here at 134, limit sell order got broken over, it did become a little support for a little push higher. In hindsight, it still breaks under that price later on. So there really isn't a whole lot that stands out here underneath 150, just underneath this top. And I mean that in regards to the CVP column, and as I nickname and label, this is also a CVP column, but I kind of just checked off my Delta column for this. So this just shows the difference between the buying and the selling at each price. Even this, there isn't really much that I would feel overtly confident about as far as a clean support level. Over time, what we do see is that support here from the chart becomes resistance. And with that, the more it knocks its head on that resistance, well, it does make the big break higher, or at least it tries to. So at first it makes an initial move up to 150 pulls back. Now, one thing that I focus on here at Cybertrading University, especially with using Bookmap, and Bruce has come to our trader summits in person, and we've had great conversations about this structure, and alongside with structure, making sure that a stock is testing a strong level in a shorter concentration, in a smaller timeframe. So notice here, it hit 152, 153-ish area, pulled back. Hit another run up, you know, even if you're thinking this is the big pop here, it needs to clear the highs, seemingly what this line should be here. Doesn't do that, it drops. Well, the next time it comes back up to that level is not until 9.57. That's a lot of time in between level tests, to me at least. So, you know, it ends up pulling back one more time, but hey, even from that stage, the more times it could nip and null at that level, those highs at 152, 153 top, in a shorter concentration, then to me, I would feel stronger about a potential breakout. So notice from the CVP column, I don't really, my volume dot setting is probably pretty high, but you could see from the CVP column, this is pretty top-heavy in relation to 150. In relation to 150, this is pretty top-heavy, and with that, it ends up making a pop. Okay, well, right here, this would actually trigger a fair entry in my eye. Our next resistance does not seem to be until 169. You have about 80,000 shares on the ask right there. So if you could jump in at 153, 154, and you know, hey, even if it breaks that and runs, great, but you know, you're talking about 15 cents worth of room, that's not bad. On 1,000 shares, that's $150, a quick in and out perhaps, or if not even more, should it break higher? The reason I bring this up to you is that, well, if we're expecting such a big move or at least a strong reaction off this 150 level, that is where I would expect to see this try and make a stronger run from it. If not up to 169, then higher, but what if it doesn't make that big move shortly after? You know, it's like what happens when you take your foot off the gas pedal for a car? Normally, you know, for us, if for a car, it slows down and then stops. For a stock, that's not really the case. You know, it's actually the polar opposite. With a stock, what happens is, what once the foot's taken off the gas pedal, it goes into reverse for you, and it takes its foot, puts its foot on the gas pedal for you, and next thing you know, you're 50, 60 miles per hour the other way. So that is where I have to be very mindful and make sure, you know what, if I even decide to take this breakout trade, let's make sure my stop is set tight. That could be subjective, because there are some traders, believe it or not, that don't look to set stops, or they set them much wider than I would prefer to. You know, to each their own. You know, I can't argue that with anyone else. Now, the reason I bring that to you is that, hey, in and out, small pop, it's not really what I'm looking for. So I'm not trying to hang on to a losing trade, especially if this resistance won't be support. Now, over time, it ends up making another push, and from here, you can see it ends up making the stronger pop, another test, and it looks like at first it's moving up to 150, testing, testing, testing, testing, then pop, and from there, it doesn't even run up right away. It takes a little bit of time to pull back and hit this as support. All right, well, if that's such a big level, we should be seeing a pretty big move shortly after. That's my motto. That's our catchphrase here at Cybertrading University. We follow the big money, so we're not gonna jump in before that resistance is truly broken, unless if you get it from a very solidified support much lower, but here, it's just to say, I wouldn't be as keen to take this trade unless if it re-broke over 150, and these highs again, 153. So if we're expecting such a big move from here, then hey, what's easy for me to tell you is that this ends up making a pretty decent move from this point, right? I mean, this limit sell order got pulled. It held there for a little bit, mind you, then broke higher. Considering how long this order was out there for, believe it or not, I do use that still as a potential level. So what happens is it does hold it a little bit as resistance at first. It breaks above it, and then from there on a pullback, look what we get, resistance initial test becomes support. So from that point, first test, best test, it pushes up a little bit more. Now, hey, that's a great trade alone from 152, 153 price, just the re-break above this pre-market resistance. So I don't wanna get too greedy when we already broke over this line, our next resistance is at two. It's an even larger limit sell order. So, hey, the more this fails to push up higher and make that big move up again, then it's easy to say, all right, well, it's not worth the time, but that's where I could even spin it and say, the more this goes sideways and you're just not making as much money on the trade any further or losing some profit, there could always be another runner, could always be another stunt, making another move that you should have your eyes on. So it's actually, you know, in that perspective as well. Now, again, normally with a lot of these small, cheap, you know, low float stocks like this, a CDIO at least, that is, use go up and down. So look what happened back a number of days ago, about two weeks ago, stock popped from even like 20 cents all the way up to 180 pulled back. You don't wanna hold onto a trade like that at this point because, hey, for all we know, this could dump all the way back down to 150 and you could lose all that beautiful profit. Doesn't make any sense to hang on, literally and figuratively sense, get it? But, you know, that means you could always jump back and on the trade should it present a new opportunity. So that's where we're here live right now. It's like here, at least on the CDIO trying to make one more push. So on this trade, we did have the iceberg at 169, but, you know, as much as I said, I'll still use that as a level. That's like kind of on the immediate side here. Now at this point, I'm not as jumpy to use that 169. And if there isn't really anything that sticks out on CVP here, then I'm gonna need a little bit more of a clue as far as like my next significant level to try and enter from. Okay, I'm not in this trade. So what if I'm trying to anticipate one more run on this? Just because it's pushing up a little bit here, honestly, that doesn't tempt me too much. Bruce, I'd like to keep the lights off as I like to say here. I like to keep this a little dim. So, you know, I'll adjust this a little bit just to see if there's a smaller level. Not even as much, you know, so that's where maybe we could just focus on the naked chart even without, you know, the heat map here. But I reckon 173 was holding pretty nicely over, you know, the 1230 timeframe, a little bit here. So perhaps if that line can become support, that could be worth our time. And then, hey, for the heat map part, well, that's where we could kind of hypothesize. You can never assume it to happen, but it's definitely possible. Where, you know, what if there's a new limit order that pops up on the book, but not a sell order, but a buy order? You know, what if we have all of a sudden a new large, a new larger buy order popping up? I don't write this stuff for you folks. I just kind of plan out what I've seen happen in the past, live in front of our very eyes. Look what just happens. Oh, that was beautiful. Now, what's gonna happen from this point? Is this going to pop higher right now? Is this gonna take some time for this to hold? Or we're not out of the weeds just yet, although it looks like a larger order, about 37,000. You know, there's still a lot of volume overall on the book this needs to get over. So there's a chance where this ends up getting broken through completely still. So that was nice to see. And there's a little touch on CDIO here, perhaps. And I wanna come back to this. There's another trade I do wanna jump to and I'm always keeping my eye on the time here as well. I do wanna open it up for a few questions from Dan and or any of our attendees here otherwise at the end. But yeah, let's see if this can make a nice push off this iceberg level or limit buy order rather we can call it and make the higher high over time. So we'll jump back to this trade. We started off with a larger cap stock like AMD. Now we moved over to a smaller cap stock like CDIO. I am pretty certain because book map has such a great ability to demonstrate crypto. And of course, you know, Bitcoin, all crypto actually. I mean, through their book map data connection there, you could really connect to, you know, a lot of the major alt coins. Well, you know, hey, even if you're not as familiar with trading Bitcoin or if you don't invest in it, that's fine because there's plenty of equities like Mara here that are in the Bitcoin sector. I'm sure a lot of us are already familiar with this, but Mara is one of the largest Bitcoin mining companies. So anytime there's a stronger push across Bitcoin, you are more than likely to get a stronger push on stocks like Mara. Of course, Coinbase, other smaller cap Bitcoin stocks like a BKKT, CleanSpark, BitBrothers, et cetera. But you know, for right now, Mara here, I wanted to bring this up actually going into this presentation, not for this pop. This actually makes it better, but what popped up earlier here, this was pretty interesting, this type of liquidity I have rarely ever have seen on Mara, and especially not at this price, maybe back when it was like a $5 stock. So earlier today, Mara ended up making a small move up, nothing special really. I mean, we were calling it out inside our live trading room a bit, but it just kind of normal kind of day from now or grinding up a little bit here and there. Well, all of a sudden we have a larger limit sell order popping up about 142K. That's not out of the norm per se, that's a larger order. So heading into 10 o'clock, especially more 10, 15, 10, 30 Eastern, that's where we expect more of a reversal, lack of momentum, so forth. Well, what popped up shortly after, just really smashed this stock down. We had a 418,000 share iceberg popping up limit sell order at 1060. So with that, I mean, I think there was even one more that popped up afterwards for a bit, let's see. Yeah, there was one more that, yeah, look at this. Another one just for a little blip, but at 1050, you have another 689,000, like over a million shares just between those two prices and then this on top. I have rarely ever seen this liquidity for an hour before, it goes to show that you can't look to try and swim upstream. When you have this type of volume and liquidity out there, regardless of news or whatnot, you really have to follow the orders that pop up. This was looking pretty strong once it broke over 1050. Your next resistance at the time was not until 1080, then 11, okay. Well, at this very point in time, like right where my cursor is, this would be a great entry, a great thought for this to run higher, make that illustrious big move. Well, yeah, when you end up getting like a 385 pound linebacker popping up in front of you here, little football talk, a little tough for this to try and continue to push through. So this was crazy, just given how large the liquidity was out there throughout the good portion of the morning here on Mara. Now, since I took my eyes off this trade though, because I really did, I popped this up right before I came on bookmaps platform here this morning for you. So it looks like it ended up bouncing around like 1030-ish at a larger shake down, and then it made a slingshot, and then it made a really strong slingshot, actually. So what gives? Is it Bitcoin that's popping right now? Is it the stock market that's trying to bounce back up right now? Well, I'll tell you what, actually, from my cell phone, although you can't see it here, I'm checking the price of Bitcoin, just taking a quick look, nothing special. I mean, it's been pushing back on up a little bit, but Mara here has made a really strong pop back up from roughly 1015 all the way up to 1075. How, why? Again, it could be the stock market. It definitely is the stock market. That's a hell of a bop. Okay, so rising tide does lift all boats. Now, here's where I was getting to though. That happened at one o'clock, didn't it? Well, it came out at one o'clock here, folks. Does anyone even know? I checked my calendar all this morning. I was looking for something to pop up. The only thing that it could be, actually, is I think there's some other Fed speaker on some interview, but there was nothing I saw coming out today outside from 10 a.m. Pretty odd. I'll take this pop, that's for sure. Now, it's just to say that Mara made this bounce before one o'clock, before the markets just broke out again. Well, I could at least tell you where it all started from. How and why. So again, let's go back to the AMD trade that we had to begin. We talked about the closing bell print. We talked about the opening bell print, not just for this very day, but for the previous week and for this week. So this is the opening price for this given week, we'll call it, 203,000 share black print filled at $10.20. So it came down to it. The first test, this is technically the first test of this as support. Hey, it's not really a pretty chart because it's making around the top here huge liquidity that drove it down, steady downtrend. You don't wanna try and catch a falling knife. But in terms of big money and liquidity, well, for that Mara trade, that 10.20 became a really strong level. It broke under it, and it broke right back over it. So that's primarily what Fausto and myself namely train our students inside our live trading room under and over. You wanna see it actually break under that price because hell, if it breaks under it and just completely collapses, then there's no entry. You actually wanna see it break under then over. So it does exactly what you would want it to do. If that's such a big level, then we should be getting a pretty big move shortly after. So the reaction was pretty strong to begin. Then of course, rising tide lifts all boats at one o'clock where we ended up getting a nicer pop afterwards. All right, so let's take one last look on the heat map here for Mara though, because heading into this afternoon, especially if we end up getting one more pop in the market, 10.80 resistance, I would say more so 11. 11 would be your larger limit sell volume out there. Looking at the chart as well, I do remember this actually like the back of my hand. Mara has a very strong daily chart level that myself and Fausto were both adamant on. A couple of months back, it's pretty much roughly around this very given price here, roughly around 10.65 to 10.70-ish. It was holding underneath there for a series of weeks at a time. It broke out from it, became support after. So in using book map, along with a long-term level, a daily chart level, same with what we just tried to see on CDIO. Let's see if there's a larger limit bioter popping up on the bid. Hey, can never guarantee it, but that would certainly give this trade a stronger boost, especially where we're focused now kind of on just a regular long-term chart level rather than something from volume. So that volume would be an extra boost to this trade here for sure. All right, so let me know, that is pretty much essentially what I wanted to cover. I got one more on Palantir. Palantir here ended up making a stronger push this morning, resistance came support, actually really strong support at 21 there. First test I would have felt most confident about, I would have been really pulling my hair out on each of these retests, because honestly, you're with lower highs, you should expect a crash lower, test of the VWAP even, or a much lower there. This was like super glue. This held like support really strong off 21 resistance. Not as big of a surprise when you see how much volume got filled here, but that's where I say the first test is the best one right here. To see it hold two more times perfect after, the cookie can't crumble any better for you in that regard if you're long. So really goes to show that you need to follow these orders, namely, and all facets of book map, of course. So Dan or Bruce, if there were any questions from traders out here, definitely let me know. I wasn't able to see as much of the chat at least over the last few minutes. Really, really quick Dan, just a little inside joke, and you just said that you don't have anything from Discord. I just thought the tech issue before I started this presentation that I wasn't streaming through this. I just had like a little PTSD moment right there. I'll try to calm down. Oh man, that was funny. Let me give you the full spectrum answer on that because I get asked questions similar to that. Like, what does Josh do? What do I do? I am, and not to say myself individually, but there's plenty of traders that have grown within themselves as traders over five years, seven years, 10 years, 20 years, of course, much more than myself, where at least in that regard, it's a lot easier to anticipate certain trades, right? It's a lot easier to expect what happens more often than not. So over time, you still want to review your trades. You want a journal, namely, and using book map as a great feature, the replay mode. I actually just did this on Saturday, midday, so I had nothing going on on a rainy Saturday afternoon and I said, you know what? Now is the time. Let's open up book map, run replay mode over the last five days, see where the big levels are, see where I could have taken a trade even on a stock I wasn't focused on at the time because, you know, hey, it's easy for me to remember certain levels on trades that I was watching intently for the last two hours. What about a stock I don't even know the levels of? Even if I were to pull up something like Tesla, actually, I was gonna do Coinbase, but Coinbase could be moving with Mara similar, so Tesla, different market. Of course, when I do this on my own ends here, on a given evening or afternoon, the more that you do this, you become more efficient at reviewing. So as a new student, this is where I'll kind of give you the full answer here, as a new trader and new student of book map or cyber trading university, we would want you to at least journal your trades on a day-to-day basis and look to review them on a day-to-day basis. It's not gonna be as easy to remember everything at first. So we want you to at least take a little time at the end of each day to go back. It could be 15 to 30 minutes. The more that you do it and the more money, let's say the better that you become at trading and you're hitting your goals more and more often, let's say you're not Mr. or Miss Perfect out there, but you're pretty happy with your results. You don't necessarily need to be as in-depth as you were at first, but you definitely need to make it a weekly or bi-weekly thing, once or twice per week, I mean. So that's where I say myself, yeah, I'm on that kind of scale. Once or twice a week, I'll look to go back on book map and go through my levels, go through certain trades. I didn't even focus on in the live market and run it back and say, okay, like I have this painted picture here already, Tesla did a bunch of nothing throughout the day, but let's just kind of look at these levels here and say, all right, why did it make the move that it made? Why not the levels that you have here? And the more of that that you do, it really takes you another step forward as early as the following trading day. I have seen tremendous results, not just within profits, but within just containing a motion or focusing on a certain part of book map where I didn't the day before. So you always gotta sharpen the knives, basically. I'll look that, well, let me just say to whoever asked that, you probably haven't checked enough information out from Bruce and Dan and book map and this wonderful team here because they have so much education on this very YouTube channel, on this very Discord, especially with other educators out there that I've taken the time to watch myself, might I say, between Scoppulcini JTrader, Mayhem for Markets, I mean, you name it, I'm actually in a lot of these webinars. Hey, follow Cybertrading University while you're at it, but it's to tell you that absolutely you could look to utilize book map, not just for intraday trading, but especially keeping the data overnight or having the ability to go back on a number of days, perhaps, you can get the past data to make decisions for your swings too. Ooh, okay, so how do you know that they will attack the bid or the offer? So my first answer around this is you never 100% know, right? Actually, just earlier, there was a trade where I thought it was gonna hit that, or is it AMD, where you thought it was gonna at least come up to the 122 and test it, I thought it would with the way it was trending up, although I was saying, expect a false breakout on the first test, I still was thinking at least it would try and hit that price and attack the offer, as you would say, right? Didn't have enough momentum at this very point in time to do it. So that's where I could say, I do wanna focus on trend and how close a stock is to a liquidity pool or a larger order out there, even this, like let's just say, we know that this 120.75 is a pretty strong level, the opening from AMD today, though it's easy to say it held a support. I wouldn't be as confident to tell you here at this point that it's very likely to come down here again. Hey, maybe it could hold off 121 and build new support over the VWAP and go back up, but the closer it does draw down or even here, we're seeing a failure to break higher, lower high, lower high, it's like, all right, well, you know, lower highs, you should be getting lower low, it's like, all right, well, the closer you get to it, then you say, all right, well, let's see if it can make that initial test under and over. You know, it's a little discouraging though, like let's say if you were expecting to sell at 122 or just a shade under and it doesn't hit you, and even if you were trying to sell under, you know, you can never time it or judge it 100% perfect is basically my best answer with that. I always say it myself. So normally I'll just tend to focus on the regular volume for Bitcoin with that. I would say that would be a great tool to utilize though, especially if you're trading the miners out there, there's plenty of them, Mara, there's Riot, CleanSpark, there's a bunch where, you know, definitely if you're more integrated with the mining data and you see how much Bitcoin they're producing, whether it be per quarter, year over year, or even on a more specific micro level, that definitely could help you feel confident with knowing what's a stronger equity compared to others, right? Personally, I haven't touched that though. So hey, maybe my homework after this presentation is for me to dig into that a little bit more. Okay, great questions. And I do see that here. I do see that from my side as well. So I appreciate that, Rob. So for myself, this is just kind of based on different flavor, right? Different, you know, just flavor opinion. Bookmap, what makes Bookmap so great is of course the data that it is using. It's all correct and extremely important, significant data, but there's so many different ways that you could present it and view it, right? There's this, and then there's the SVP column that is basically brother-sister. There's the time and sales integrated here as well. And of course, all sorts of different add-ons and indicators. Certainly I'm looking forward to the market pulse absorption that I'm gonna be talking to you on, Bruce, probably in a couple of weeks. But, you know, just here, I don't like having as many dots on my screen. That's just my personal flavor. I like having a few out there because I definitively know that those are larger single-block transactions. A long while back, I had these settings kind of toyed with and I was working with Bruce and he showed me what I was looking for at the time. And I've kept these settings basically the same sense. The only setting that I do change is the minimal trade size. And, you know, hey, if you're looking for more dots and to kind of see the singular buying and selling rather than the aggressive buying and selling, it's just to say this number is what you wanna play with. So I can make this 10,000, it'll show more dots. I like to have a few on there at least. So I'll play with it. You know, it could be 50,000, it could be 100,000 at times. This isn't too bad for me right now. This is pretty easy on the eyes, at least this afternoon. Oh, and then also the second question to me, kind of answer that. So do you operate purely in order flow on book map or do you view higher timeframe charts? Oh, absolutely view higher timeframe charts. So for as much as I wanted to keep this presentation of my own year book map centric, I absolutely put a larger focus on higher timeframe. So that goes back to Mara and maybe it's not high timeframe accounting for years on end, but from earlier this year, you know, we had this 10,66 price that we were focused on roughly around there. And should this begin to build support above 10,66 or rather make a larger pop even this afternoon, that would be a level to work off of going forward. If you're focused even on the spy, this is not as much a higher timeframe perhaps, Rob, but more of a chart level I can give you here. Let me flip screens. I got a whole bunch of lines on this one, don't I? So not as much a high timeframe, but you could just see, and delete all this crap here, but you could see the larger purple line right here. It was holding under that area all throughout last week. That was basically last week's high. So for as bullish as the market has been, I was looking for a breakout over it this morning. So that's all I was focused on with this one trade, and that was just based on a chart level. But of course, when it goes back to like a higher timeframe more than just a couple of days, I definitely I'll use a daily, weekly, monthly chart. That's a whole conversation that I don't think that we have as much time remaining to go over, but I absolutely do. Timing of the day plays largely into my decision, and the answer I give is with day trading. So with swing trading, you should have more time to plan trades out. You shouldn't feel as much of a smaller window of opportunity to plan trades out and make money on them. So here as a day trade at least, a large part of it is based on timing of the day and range. So a lot of what we teach our students is, and this played out pretty nice, where it did top off right around 10, 45, 11 o'clock in the morning roughly. Normally that's where we do expect reversals to happen, around this 10, 30, maybe 11 o'clock zone. So let's say it begins to tail off at this point and you're thinking, all right, as long as it is making a higher low, maybe there's a chance it could pop. The more it doesn't do that and you should realize it's stalling out, you should realize that normally, both stocks either reverse or just flatten out after a run in the morning like this. Well, that's where I say, okay, it's 11 o'clock, let's see what else is out moving out there. At 12, one o'clock, it's really kind of a garbage time in terms of being an active trader. I don't know, it came out at one o'clock that popped the market so nice. Perhaps that could definitely change things there, but just normally 12 o'clock Eastern, one PM Eastern, small story. I worked from the real estate background in New York City and financial district, literally on Wall Street for a few years before joining Fausto, and I would always see these suits out there at 11 30 in the morning, 11 o'clock at the food trucks lined up, like the whole aisle stands, I'm like, why are they out so early? Well, they're not just getting lunch, but they're going into board meetings or different meetings throughout the day and larger traders and firms out there, they're not as proactive during 12 o'clock, 12, 31 o'clock, so we have to follow that kind of motto too and say, even if a stock is not moving, sometimes the next trade might just be no trade and just say, all right, let's just kind of wait until the later afternoon. No, I definitely can go forever, but I don't want to hold you folks up. Bruce and Dan, you guys are excellent, and Rob as well, thank you everyone for joining us and taking part in this webinar here today. All I want to make mention of is just, hey, head on over to our social media streams here at CybertradingU, just on YouTube and Twitter slash X that being, we've been a lot more proactive on X of late, just there's actually a very growing market for that of late. I've seen book map on there as well, so make sure to follow us just on both and alongside just checking us out on our website there, CybertradingUniversity.com. Excellent, thank you guys so much, I do appreciate it. You as well guys, take care.