 There is one other stock right now that I have been intently watching from earlier today. We all have been watching the stock from earlier today. Not as much Mara, but the stock Lucy, if my student Felix is here coming off our coach and call, I hope he's here right now, he's probably cracking up at this. So earlier on the Lucy trade, we've been looking for this. Since the morning, since 10.35 Eastern time, actually I want to get the timestamp even out there on the recording side too, bear with me just for a split moment. We've been looking for this since 10.25 Eastern time myself and Felix. So just earlier, this ended up making a nice breakout this morning, this Lucy trade. So the thing with it is that it ended up showing a pretty clean chart level on this stock earlier in the morning. There were a bunch of levels that we could have taken the time to have plotted here. But if anything, a couple of things that I wrote was that 3.23 was just a strong chart level, if anything. And that was later into the pre-market around 8.49 in the morning. That was kind of the first comment about 3.23 as a potentially strong chart level. Now after that, at 10.25 in the morning, I was on my call with Felix here, and we were both saying, well, we're kind of looking for Lucy to find that support right around that 3.25 level. So I actually have 3.23 here as the chart level, and this is something I don't always happen to use, folks. So as a new trader here, please don't think this is really a prime strategy for what I follow. It's just really miscellaneous, but I thought it was something that could have helped me out a little bit here. I ended up using actually a Fibonacci retracement on this stack. I went from the closing price from yesterday to the high. And with that, I ended up realizing that we had some good alignment between, I think, this is the 38.2% retracement. That's right off of the price 3.32 roughly. Notice that's where I had the blue line that was there, the darker blue. So this is basically the area that I was looking for support just a moment ago, prior to trader stock beginning. So I actually just leaned into this trade, just as we were kind of reviewing the other one. I have my stop set right below the lows here at this point. So if it does break lower, then obviously I'm going to take a small, tiny loss on it, if anything. But I thought it was worth the while for the entry. The key, though, is that if you have your levels plotted, then you need to make sure the stock breaks under that first because it may keep dropping, right? I mean, there are plenty of times where I'm calling out a level and otherwise it breaks under it and it doesn't break back through it. It doesn't break back over the level again. So this afforded me a little bounce here right now, correct? But that's where you got to have your stops tight and realize that it needs to make that big move shortly after. It needs to. That's just what we expect. So you don't want to fight that, right? Josh Levitan's 1,000 shares does not control Lucy here. That's up 134% in trading 50 million shares on the day today, right? And the reason I say it that way is because I know that none of us here are that egotistical to think that their shares control the direction of the stock. But if we're not thinking that way, then what are we thinking? You know what I mean? Do you think that you're going to be able to sway the movement of the stock then? Like don't fight it. So if this didn't make a big reaction here off of 323 so far, then I'd be a little concerned. That's all. Ryan saying, do you always set your stop at the VWAP? I do not. I always set my stop under the big level that I took the time to enter from. So like on Mara there maybe off of the 970, the fact the VWAP was like coinciding with that allowed for a little entry there, kind of with the combination of the two. So I just use this as like the backup support level of the two. When you have two levels that are really tight to each other, it's a good thing, especially if they have two separate meanings to them. Like if there's like 50,000 share iceberg order and you took the time to plot that. And when you look on the historical chart, you know maybe four pennies above that, there is a really strong historical level that's you know really strong. Alright well if they have two completely separate meanings there and they're just pennies apart, I like that. That's kind of like a big range of support or resistance. Actually how about this, not to jump too far or around to your folks. Actually we got a bunch of emails. I got to take the time to go through an answer here before we wrap. And it hasn't made that big move yet. If it keeps affording you the chance to get there, then you have to take it. Might sound insane to look for the same thing to happen, expecting a different result. But like even on Lucy, this is not shortable, the stock. It's hard to borrow. But look at the amount of times this damn thing was testing 350. Right? Eventually led to a drop and a pretty good break of support. So the more times it's cracking that support level, eventually it's going to lead to a drop-off. Maybe a short opportunity if you're able. So you know I don't mind taking a trade a couple times even if I take a small loss initially because of the probability of it getting that bigger reaction shortly after. If I take a minus three to make a plus 22, am I crying at the end of the plus 22? No. If I have to take a minus two, minus three, and then get the plus 22, I'm still in the plus. I'm still pretty happy. So if you do that five, six times over and your stops are not tight, yes, that's where it's going to kind of add up a decent amount and just it doesn't justify the means. So that's where we have to work together, you and I. And I'm just saying that as a generic comment to all of us here. Just to any one of us watching this traders talk, if you're that type of trader where you're getting stuck in a bunch of losing trades, you're trying to take the same trade over and over, well, maybe you're focused on the right level, but you're setting your stops way too wide, way too loose. Or otherwise maybe you're not focused on the right level in general. If that's the case, then we just have to kind of align you with knowing what's the right level to watch. That's all. That's actually an easier fix, technically. But then otherwise on Lucy, well, hey, you know, this has made a very good reaction off of the level I took the time to recognize. So even now, just to lock up a little money off of that one level and take half of my position out here, I think that justifies just getting in the trade, right? So it's all about knowing where your big levels are first. I'm a cyber group member today. 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