 So with that, I thought I'd clarify hidden demand and supply. So just quickly, I guess many of you know if you have, if you don't know, I don't really want to go over the course material again, because the video is there, right? But one of the things I think that, well, one of the questions that I asked yesterday was whether this zone here was considered hidden supply. And it is, it can be, the way that I'm going to put it is, is that, and I think I'd kind of say it in the course as well, but technically it is considered hidden supply, right? In so far as, in the way that we draw hidden supply is where you've got a basically what's known as an outside candle. So you've got an outside candle where the high goes above the previous candles high, and then it closes below the previous candles low, right? Now, there's this, in this scenario though, we have actually an obvious bullish candle. So with this bullish candle, although yes, technically, those are the rules for a hidden supply, yeah? It's not hidden, it's not hidden because even if you didn't know that was hidden supply and the way that we draw, you know, supply and demand zones with lower highs and lower lows, yeah? Yeah? Then you would still, you definitely still have drawn that supply zone, yeah? And because it was obvious to see, right? So it's not really hidden, although the rules do say that it is hidden. And whether you call it hidden or not really doesn't matter simply because you would have spotted it anyway, right? Now, what we do have is a situation where let's go into a different situation, right? So in this one, right, where we have bearish candles and then we also have the, oh, sorry, do you know what? I didn't, in the last, sorry, in that last screen where I was drawing hidden demand, did you guys didn't see what I was drawing? Did you, did you guys see what I was drawing? No, all right, sorry, let me just explain that again, then sorry, apologies. I was using a different drawing tool. So when it comes to hidden supply, this area here, right? What you've got is the rules state that hidden supply you have to have like an outside candle, right? An outside candle is basically a candle that engulfs the previous candles high or low, right? And closes below the previous candles low or high in, for example, a demand zone, right? So it totally engulfs the previous candles high and low price. That's basically it, yeah? Now, hidden supply, that's the technical definition of it. Now, in this scenario, you have a bullish candle which is basically obvious for everyone to see. So when we're looking at plotting supply zones, let's say, we would still have drawn that area of supply because it was visible, right? That's just how we draw lower highs and lower lows when we know that the bullish candle was the pullback, et cetera, all right? So the question, as again, the nuance I guess is this, is technically, yes, that is hidden demand, but it's not hidden. Even if you didn't know what hidden demand or hidden supply, sorry, was simply because you would still have drawn your supply zone from there to there. Does that make sense, guys? Even if you didn't know that was considered hidden supply, that would still be a supply zone that you would have drawn. It wouldn't have been anything that actually is hidden, yeah? So yeah, you'll get that, yeah? So you can classify it as hidden supply technically. I'm not saying that you're wrong if you did still class that as technical, but you would have marked out, I can say you would have marked out the wick instead of the candle, right? Okay, so what Ken is, I think we're referring to is this, is again, probably from the wick, so from around here, in fact, will really be the open of that level there. So that would also be considered again a zone from there to there, yeah? And again, you can draw it like that, but there are times where you may, if you do get a scenario like this, price may not come up to here, and then we could get, for example, prices may come up that high and you could miss out on this trade. So for me, personally, over the years, I've kind of adjusted it and I don't think I've updated the course, but all that part of the course anyway, but generally, if I see a bullish candle before an outside candle, I would just generally tend to draw the zone from that bullish candle open to encompass that, because as I said before, I don't know if I'm drawing it really from the open of that candlestick, and just basically from the wick, I don't know whether prices may come up to that zone and this could be a very valid trade before prices go to the downside. Does that make sense, Ken? Yeah, and this has a standard supply, yeah. And that's why I just say, do you know what? It's best if you just call that just standard supply. If you've got that bullish candle stick right there before you get the outside candle, or what I would know to be, what's known as a capture pain candle, then just draw it from there, yeah? But in this scenario, for example, in this scenario, one second, it's slightly different, simply because the previous engulfing candle engulfs, yeah, and let me draw a different color for the pen, right? The candle engulfs the previous candle that was actually bearish, closed bearish, right? Now, that would be hidden because ultimately what we know to be lower highs and lower lows like that that move to the upside is represented by generally a bullish candle, right? A bullish daily candle before it makes the lower low, right? But in this scenario, you would miss this because the wick of the engulfing candle goes above the previous candle and then closes below the previous candle's low. So again, you would miss this because if you're waiting for a bullish candle to tell you where there is a lower high than a lower low, yeah? You might miss this or you definitely will miss it and I'm gonna show you an example of that, right? You're gonna miss this hidden supply area because ultimately what is this? This is if you're drawing this out, one second, let me just get a black marker, right? So let's just follow this out, right? So prices started from here, probably went higher, lower, higher, right? Next candle, higher, lower throughout the day than there. So you can start to see it's making some lower highs, yeah? But not enough demand, there's not enough demand in that for it to really be considered lower highs. Of course, if you go down to a lower timeframe, then cool. There would be pullbacks, right? But we want significant demand or significant lower high in order to consider that or supply to be considered a zone worth taking, right? So this is making micro, I guess, lower highs and lower lows, right? But then you get something where you get this and it goes above the previous candles there, then comes back down. That could have been considered in real time as well. You think about what this candle actually was, yeah? Think about what this candle actually was. And let me just get a green and let me guess square, right? So in real time, before this candle closed, and imagine this is a daily timeframe chart, right? At some point, this candle looked very bullish. That wick represents a bullish candle, right? Everyone agree with that? Yeah, that would have been bullish. And then what happens is it evaporates, yeah? And then turns bearish, yeah? Turns bearish, oops, sorry, right? Then turns bearish by the end of the day. So for me, this becomes hidden because there was definitely, it was definitely bullish and then created that bearish candle. So there was a lot of supply that came in, so much supply during the day, even though it was a bullish day and it closed, it went above, I say it closed, but it went above the previous days high. There was so much supply that came in that it pushed prices down beyond the previous days closed, right? Which is again both significant. So that becomes hidden supply because on a price chart, most traders wouldn't see that, yeah? They would not see that. And here's an example of this, right? When I do hidden demand, right? So hidden demand is where, I think it was Rishi, right? So Rishi said to me, is Rishi in here, by the way? Is he in here? Oh, he's not here. But Rishi said, he marked out this chart that I've put and he said basically that he thought that demand should have been from wherever he's drawing it from. Now, I would say, no, right? So what Rishi didn't see was hidden demand, right? What Rishi didn't see was that. So from this perspective, and let me just get a green marker, right? What you've seen is, well, actually the first thing I wanna address, the first one I wanna address is whenever you're drawing demand or supply, don't draw it from, you have to draw it from the last bearish candles, open price to the swing low. So that in itself is not where you should draw it from. But let's pretend that there wasn't hidden demand. Let's just say there was, it just literally went like this and there was no hidden demand there. You would have drawn the zone really from there. That's where you would have drawn it from. Yeah. But in this scenario, the last push before prices make a new high, yeah, is here. Yeah. And it's because technically prices go below the previous candles low and then they close above the previous candles high. Yeah. So it close up here. So technically this is the last demand zone that push prices higher. Yeah. So, and it also engulfs the previous candle which was actually a bullish candle close as well. Yeah. So you want to draw it from the wick down to the low and that is hidden demand. Yeah. So it was so well hidden, Rishi didn't see it. And a lot of traders don't see that, right? They don't see that there is actually demands in that area there.