Can you explain what you know about that, please?
Let me get this straight... a guy on eBay says he has an indicator that reveals the best kept secrets of banks, those same banks that have billions and entire departments of quantitative analysis, and you think for $200 he's going to give you the key to the kingdom. It sounds as logical as buying a Rolex at a gas station. The truth is that these kinds of offers are designed to seduce the desperate trader, the one looking for a magic bullet because he doesn't want to accept that trading is 90% emotional management and 10% technical. If you really want to improve, stop looking for shortcuts and start studying market structures and risk management.
Thank you for all the contributions, honestly. The good thing about asking on forums like this is that at least one finds honest opinions without trying to sell you smoke. I was already getting carried away by the excitement of �what if it works?� I�m going to keep learning on my own, step by step. I�ve already lost enough money buying courses and magical systems. I guess this is also part of learning. The market has a pretty hard way of teaching you what you don�t want to learn by the good ones.
For those who ask why I even considered it: it�s not so much for the indicator, but because the concept that banks �hun� stops seems interesting to me. I�ve read on several sites about that theory and it makes some sense. Now, whether the indicator itself is a garbage or not, well, it�s what I�m trying to find out. But it seems that the answer is already clear enough. Thank you for helping me not to throw $200 into the trash.
What if we are all wrong? Sometimes I wonder if these �secret� strategies won�t work precisely because no one takes them seriously. And if the type of eBay really hit something that works and we�re the fools that laugh? Of course, it can also be just another smart one selling a renowned MT4 file. But, in the trading world, the unlikely is not always impossible. That�s why I asked, in case someone had really tried it.
To all those who responded with sarcasm... I understand their point, but they could answer without mocking. Some of us are really trying to learn, even if we screw up asking things that sound ridiculous. Anyway, I appreciate that they have said what they think. I save myself a bad drink. The last thing I need now is another "saint grail" that only serves to empty accounts.
I have seen many indicators, systems, robots and signs on sale that promise wonders. And most have something in common: no one teaches to lose with dignity or accept that the market is not always going to agree with us. That�s why every time I see a promise to �know where banks buy and sell,� it makes me laugh. Not even the banks know for sure many times. If they were so infallible, there would not be the concept of drawdown in their quarterly reports.