 Right, I'll get started now. And so group calls, 27th of April, how time is flying. A few, quite a few questions to go over and I think a chart as well. Welcome Rishi, I'll just mute your mic. And in fact, I think this was Rishi's question regarding short-term and long-term trading intro or swing. And the question is that Rishi thinks that intraday timeframe short-term and daily is above and above is that long-term, please clear me about this, right? So what I wanna say is that we're trading both short-term and long-term, meaning that the focus should really be on the medium to long-term trades because that's what the fundamentals and I guess sometimes risk sentiment can be driven by. So we're looking at medium to long-term trade ideas only. In the short-term, price is and can be very random. Now, as a consequence of just focusing on the medium to long-term, you will have short-term trades, so the timeframe should only really be used in so far as, you know, when people go down to maybe the 15 minute or the five minute is only for really looking at, you know, entries or when you're available to trade. So if you're around to place a trade based off of a five-minute candlestick and you're available, you're sitting there and you've got an hour spare and you think that, you know, price will come down to a daily zone, for example. Let me just maybe just draw this out. And then many of you know this, but just for Rishi and everyone else, can everyone see my pen tool, by the way? Can everyone see that? Yeah, brilliant, right? So ultimately you're looking at, if we're looking at short-term and long-term trading, it's not one or the other. We're looking at, you know, both. And so what we're looking at is higher timeframe to say prices come down to a demand zone, right? Is it demand zone from the past and prices come down, yeah? The timeframe that you enter, yeah? If you're looking at that daily zone is totally subjective and up to you when you want to enter, right? Because like I said, if you wanna enter on a five-minute chart, then you have to literally be around to look at five-minute candles. If you wanna place a pending order and not be around and just say, all right, I'm placing a random pending order, then that's just, you know, how you enter. But when it comes to short-term and long-term, I'm always thinking that prices should want to move, you know, hundreds of pips, yeah? Because this should be considered a bargain. And if it is a bargain, yeah? Then the upside potential is always going to be, you know, hundreds of pips. I don't know whether prices are going to turn around there because the market has to agree that this is actually a bargain. But, you know, it's not a differentiation between short-term and long-term. It's just how we, you know, want to enter. So I always, you know, tell traders to try if you can and you should enter multiple positions. And this is in the course. If you haven't watched the course or you know, you know, I can't keep repeating myself because all this information is in the course. And I'm here to, you know, to clarify things. But if you haven't watched it and you're asking questions, then, you know, you're being lazy at the end of the day because the information is all there, yeah? So if you were looking at short-term and long-term, it's just a function of how many positions you're entering. I mean, if you get into, for example, like I said, you know, two or three or four positions, depending on how many positions, that's where the short-term and long-term comes into things. Right? So prices come down to a demand zone. And if you enter, enter, let's say two positions, yeah? Then one can be your short-term and one can be your swing trade. Yeah? Your long-term. That's, it's literally as simple as that. If you get into one position, yeah? Then it can still be your short-term and long-term. How is that? It can be your short-term and long-term because what you can do is take partial profits, yeah? If you reach a certain, you know, risk to reward ratio, right? So let's say, for example, you enter into one position and you're in that position and it goes, for example, a, you know, a one-to-one type trade, right? So you get, you know, one-to-one at the moment. Well, sorry, that's one-to-one. Now, do you take full position or partial profits? I would say, if you're only in one position, I would say take partial profits, right? Partial profits and probably take 50% of that. Yeah, again, this is just a recommendation. This is not the exact thing you can do it, you know? This is like the minimum that I guess you should do. Yeah, and get yourself to break even, yeah? So if you take 50% partial profits at a one-to-one, if you risked, let's say, for example, you know, one pound in that trade, yeah? And you take 50% of that, that's 50p or 50 cents, yeah, that's profit, which means your risk in the market will then be also 50p, which means that you're actually at break-even with your stop-loss still in the same place, yeah? So short-term, you've banked some profit. Long-term, yeah? You're just, you're swing trading to see or, you know, holding that trade fundamentally to see how far that trade can go. There is no, you know, short-term versus long-term trading, because, you know, I don't know what's gonna happen in the short-term. I have no idea what's gonna happen in short-term and no one knows what's gonna happen in short-term. It's the 50-50 coin flip. What I am, you know, I guess more, more sure of, I wouldn't say, you know, certain of or anything like that, but more sure of is, if this is a bargain, then prices should move hundreds of pips. So I'm gonna take profits along the way and try to, you know, make the most out of that. So does that clarify to everybody? And I think Rishi as well, how, I guess, the approach of how, you know, we trade, right? And also, you know, it does, Rishi, brilliant. And it says, how can we generate idea? And Rishi also says, how can we generate ideas using the same data for short-term and long-term? Again, it's not short-term and long-term. It's you're looking at medium to long-term all the time but taking potential short-term partial profits. And how can we run long-trend, like you said, in 2019 in the same way, right? We've been doing it, you know, for nothing, nothing's really changed, right? Anyone who's joined me this year, right? So January, you would have seen or you should have seen, even if you, you know, even before you joined Trading 180 and you were paying attention to maybe my weekly videos and things like that on YouTube, the free content that I give out, you would have known that, you know, my bias was to go short on the euro-dollar, right? Short-euro-dollar, been short-euro-dollar for a very, very, very long time, over a year now, yeah? It's been over a year since I've been saying and recommending and not financial advice but saying, you know, I'm short on the euro-dollar, right? There are potential, there were potential periods where I was thinking, hmm, it could be a bit of a turnaround, but overall, I've never put out that I'm long on the euro. I've changed my bias. I've changed my bias on the pound. You've seen recently what I've said a few weeks ago that my bias now is to go short on the pound and you've seen what's happened, you know, with the pound. I've never said I'm going long, but the point is that my bias has been to short-euro-dollar, yeah? And what Rishi is referring to, I don't know if you've many of you've seen it, but there's a video that I did back in, I think maybe 2020 where I went over my trading bias for the euro-dollar for the whole of 2019 and breaking down the reasons why fundamentally. And it's the same reasons fundamentally as to why the euro-dollar has been going down, you know, this year, right? And over the past year. So if you've joined me from the beginning of the year, let's say for example, this was, let's get rid of that, this was 2022, right? We've moved how many pips from here? Not saying that we've captured all these pips or anything like that. The prices have moved around 900 pips or so, right? So the point is, is that what you ultimately want to do is just trade in one direction. What you're doing is just trading on pullbacks, that's it. However you trade on the pullbacks and whether it does pullbacks off, it was a pullback there, you could have lost, but you know, if you held on, for example, you might have lost that trade if you got in there, you would have, you know, more than made up for it on certain trades, right? So it's just looking at supply zones, that's all you're looking to do, looking at supply zones, daily supply zones, looking for pullbacks.