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📊 Welcome To Market Makers Lab
We deploy TWO institutional execution infrastructures:
🥇 STRATEGY 1: FX & Metals Flow (XAUUSD, EURUSD, GBPUSD)
🥈 STRATEGY 2: Tech Index Flow (NAS100)
🔗 THE INFRASTRUCTURE:
🔎 Menu / Info: https://marketmakerslab.carrd.co/
🩸 THE INSIGHT:
Market makers engineer the markets through calculated liquidity hunts. They push price to trigger stops, accumulate positions, then reverse. It's a pattern. Repeatable. Profitable. Information asymmetry is everything. We analyze the macro footprints and position ourselves exactly where liquidity hunts sweep retail stop losses.
Stop being the exit liquidity. Start tracking it. 👁
📒 THE ARCHITECTURE (High Yield CopyTrading):
Both strategies operate under the exact same ruthless execution matrix:
• Base Risk: 5% per trade. (Max 1 setup/day per asset).
• Dynamic Scaling: We secure 60% profit at TP1 & shift SL to Break-Even (Zero Risk).
• The Runner: The remaining 40% uses an algorithmic trailing stop to extract maximum trend R:R (Usually 2.0 to 3.5x).
• Time Stop: All positions are forced flat at NY Midday. Zero overnight risk. No gap exposure.
🧠 THE ALPHA: What retail traders get wrong about "institutional levels"
Most people in trading communities throw around words like "Smart Money", "Market Makers", or "institutional liquidity" — but very few actually understand what they're looking at.
Do Goldman Sachs and Bank of America trade together?
No. There is no coordination. That would be illegal market manipulation. What actually happens is simpler — they converge naturally. Same pricing models. Same hedging logic. Same need to source liquidity before moving heavy size. It's emergent behaviour, not a conspiracy.
And yes — they are often on opposite sides of the same trade. The price you see on your chart is the equilibrium of these opposing forces, not the decision of one entity.
So what are we actually reading on the chart?
Behavioural footprints. Not the intention of a specific bank. Their footprints. Price sweeping a level violently then rejecting hard. Volume spikes with no continuation. The mark institutions leave on price, on structure, on the way liquidity gets built and then consumed.
These patterns are real. They are statistically repeatable. That's the edge.
The honest ceiling:
At the highest level of retail analysis, you are working with strong inferences, not certainties. The edge is real because the underlying logic repeats — institutions always need liquidity, they always trigger stops to fill size, and they always leave footprints doing it.
But anyone telling you they know exactly what Goldman is doing right now is lying to you.
The best you can do — and it is genuinely powerful — is to read the market the way a tracker reads the forest. You don't see the animal. You see where it walked.
That's the game. Play it with precision, not fantasy.
We deploy TWO institutional execution infrastructures:
🥇 STRATEGY 1: FX & Metals Flow (XAUUSD, EURUSD, GBPUSD)
🥈 STRATEGY 2: Tech Index Flow (NAS100)
🔗 THE INFRASTRUCTURE:
🔎 Menu / Info: https://marketmakerslab.carrd.co/
🩸 THE INSIGHT:
Market makers engineer the markets through calculated liquidity hunts. They push price to trigger stops, accumulate positions, then reverse. It's a pattern. Repeatable. Profitable. Information asymmetry is everything. We analyze the macro footprints and position ourselves exactly where liquidity hunts sweep retail stop losses.
Stop being the exit liquidity. Start tracking it. 👁
📒 THE ARCHITECTURE (High Yield CopyTrading):
Both strategies operate under the exact same ruthless execution matrix:
• Base Risk: 5% per trade. (Max 1 setup/day per asset).
• Dynamic Scaling: We secure 60% profit at TP1 & shift SL to Break-Even (Zero Risk).
• The Runner: The remaining 40% uses an algorithmic trailing stop to extract maximum trend R:R (Usually 2.0 to 3.5x).
• Time Stop: All positions are forced flat at NY Midday. Zero overnight risk. No gap exposure.
🧠 THE ALPHA: What retail traders get wrong about "institutional levels"
Most people in trading communities throw around words like "Smart Money", "Market Makers", or "institutional liquidity" — but very few actually understand what they're looking at.
Do Goldman Sachs and Bank of America trade together?
No. There is no coordination. That would be illegal market manipulation. What actually happens is simpler — they converge naturally. Same pricing models. Same hedging logic. Same need to source liquidity before moving heavy size. It's emergent behaviour, not a conspiracy.
And yes — they are often on opposite sides of the same trade. The price you see on your chart is the equilibrium of these opposing forces, not the decision of one entity.
So what are we actually reading on the chart?
Behavioural footprints. Not the intention of a specific bank. Their footprints. Price sweeping a level violently then rejecting hard. Volume spikes with no continuation. The mark institutions leave on price, on structure, on the way liquidity gets built and then consumed.
These patterns are real. They are statistically repeatable. That's the edge.
The honest ceiling:
At the highest level of retail analysis, you are working with strong inferences, not certainties. The edge is real because the underlying logic repeats — institutions always need liquidity, they always trigger stops to fill size, and they always leave footprints doing it.
But anyone telling you they know exactly what Goldman is doing right now is lying to you.
The best you can do — and it is genuinely powerful — is to read the market the way a tracker reads the forest. You don't see the animal. You see where it walked.
That's the game. Play it with precision, not fantasy.
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Enviadas
Gael Jean-louis Michel Poiroux
📊 Welcome To Market Makers Lab
We deploy TWO institutional execution infrastructures:
🥇 STRATEGY 1: FX & Metals Flow (XAUUSD, EURUSD, GBPUSD)
🥈 STRATEGY 2: Tech Index Flow (NAS100)
🔗 THE INFRASTRUCTURE:
🔎 Menu / Info: https://marketmakerslab.carrd.co/
🩸 THE INSIGHT:
Market makers engineer the markets through calculated liquidity hunts. They push price to trigger stops, accumulate positions, then reverse. It's a pattern. Repeatable. Profitable. Information asymmetry is everything. We analyze the macro footprints and position ourselves exactly where liquidity hunts sweep retail stop losses.
Stop being the exit liquidity. Start tracking it. 👁
📒 THE ARCHITECTURE (High Yield CopyTrading):
Both strategies operate under the exact same ruthless execution matrix:
• Base Risk: 5% per trade. (Max 1 setup/day per asset).
• Dynamic Scaling: We secure 60% profit at TP1 & shift SL to Break-Even (Zero Risk).
• The Runner: The remaining 40% uses an algorithmic trailing stop to extract maximum trend R:R (Usually 2.0 to 3.5x).
• Time Stop: All positions are forced flat at NY Midday. Zero overnight risk. No gap exposure.
🧠 THE ALPHA: What retail traders get wrong about "institutional levels"
Most people in trading communities throw around words like "Smart Money", "Market Makers", or "institutional liquidity" — but very few actually understand what they're looking at.
Do Goldman Sachs and Bank of America trade together?
No. There is no coordination. That would be illegal market manipulation. What actually happens is simpler — they converge naturally. Same pricing models. Same hedging logic. Same need to source liquidity before moving heavy size. It's emergent behaviour, not a conspiracy.
And yes — they are often on opposite sides of the same trade. The price you see on your chart is the equilibrium of these opposing forces, not the decision of one entity.
So what are we actually reading on the chart?
Behavioural footprints. Not the intention of a specific bank. Their footprints. Price sweeping a level violently then rejecting hard. Volume spikes with no continuation. The mark institutions leave on price, on structure, on the way liquidity gets built and then consumed.
These patterns are real. They are statistically repeatable. That's the edge.
The honest ceiling:
At the highest level of retail analysis, you are working with strong inferences, not certainties. The edge is real because the underlying logic repeats — institutions always need liquidity, they always trigger stops to fill size, and they always leave footprints doing it.
But anyone telling you they know exactly what Goldman is doing right now is lying to you.
The best you can do — and it is genuinely powerful — is to read the market the way a tracker reads the forest. You don't see the animal. You see where it walked.
That's the game. Play it with precision, not fantasy.
We deploy TWO institutional execution infrastructures:
🥇 STRATEGY 1: FX & Metals Flow (XAUUSD, EURUSD, GBPUSD)
🥈 STRATEGY 2: Tech Index Flow (NAS100)
🔗 THE INFRASTRUCTURE:
🔎 Menu / Info: https://marketmakerslab.carrd.co/
🩸 THE INSIGHT:
Market makers engineer the markets through calculated liquidity hunts. They push price to trigger stops, accumulate positions, then reverse. It's a pattern. Repeatable. Profitable. Information asymmetry is everything. We analyze the macro footprints and position ourselves exactly where liquidity hunts sweep retail stop losses.
Stop being the exit liquidity. Start tracking it. 👁
📒 THE ARCHITECTURE (High Yield CopyTrading):
Both strategies operate under the exact same ruthless execution matrix:
• Base Risk: 5% per trade. (Max 1 setup/day per asset).
• Dynamic Scaling: We secure 60% profit at TP1 & shift SL to Break-Even (Zero Risk).
• The Runner: The remaining 40% uses an algorithmic trailing stop to extract maximum trend R:R (Usually 2.0 to 3.5x).
• Time Stop: All positions are forced flat at NY Midday. Zero overnight risk. No gap exposure.
🧠 THE ALPHA: What retail traders get wrong about "institutional levels"
Most people in trading communities throw around words like "Smart Money", "Market Makers", or "institutional liquidity" — but very few actually understand what they're looking at.
Do Goldman Sachs and Bank of America trade together?
No. There is no coordination. That would be illegal market manipulation. What actually happens is simpler — they converge naturally. Same pricing models. Same hedging logic. Same need to source liquidity before moving heavy size. It's emergent behaviour, not a conspiracy.
And yes — they are often on opposite sides of the same trade. The price you see on your chart is the equilibrium of these opposing forces, not the decision of one entity.
So what are we actually reading on the chart?
Behavioural footprints. Not the intention of a specific bank. Their footprints. Price sweeping a level violently then rejecting hard. Volume spikes with no continuation. The mark institutions leave on price, on structure, on the way liquidity gets built and then consumed.
These patterns are real. They are statistically repeatable. That's the edge.
The honest ceiling:
At the highest level of retail analysis, you are working with strong inferences, not certainties. The edge is real because the underlying logic repeats — institutions always need liquidity, they always trigger stops to fill size, and they always leave footprints doing it.
But anyone telling you they know exactly what Goldman is doing right now is lying to you.
The best you can do — and it is genuinely powerful — is to read the market the way a tracker reads the forest. You don't see the animal. You see where it walked.
That's the game. Play it with precision, not fantasy.
Gael Jean-louis Michel Poiroux
Ha publicado MetaTrader 5 señal
📊 MARKET MAKERS LAB: INSTITUTIONAL LIQUIDITY ENGINE Stop being the exit liquidity. Start tracking it. 👁 Retail traders are engineered prey. Market Makers accumulate during low-volume zones, trigger stops, and reverse. It is a ruthless, repeatable algorithmic cycle. You are either providing the liquidity or you are tracking the hunt. MML doesn't "predict." We map institutional zones where retail flow is trapped and execute with mathematical coldness. 🩸 THE ALPHA: PROPRIETARY SCORING MATRIX We
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