Summary of "Olymp trade 1 min powerful strategy 2025 | Olymp trade strategy | Olymp trade"
Video focus
A short-term (1-minute) price-action/indicator trading strategy demonstrated on the Olymp Trade platform. The presenter refers to it as a “volume strategy,” but the live rules shown rely on EMA crossovers, price action and clock-timed entries/expiries.
Instruments, platform and assets
- Platform: Olymp Trade (binary/CFD-style short-term trades).
- Time frame: 1-minute candles (clock-timed trades).
- Currency shown: Indian rupees (₹). Example stakes shown: ₹7,200 → ₹5,000, later ₹20,000, then ₹2,000 and ₹1,000.
- No specific tickers, indices, crypto, bonds or ETFs are named.
Indicator setup and entry framework
Indicators
- Triple EMA setup:
- EMA(5) — short-term (purple in the demo).
- EMA(13) — short-term/medium (orange/blue in the demo).
- EMA(55) — long-term trend filter.
Entry rules
- Primary trigger: EMA(5) crossing EMA(13).
- Cross down = sell / down trade.
- Cross up = buy / up trade.
- Prefer trades where EMA(55) confirms the trend (price and the short EMAs on the same side of EMA(55)).
- Confirm with price action: candle momentum, recent large candles, visible support/resistance and rejection wicks.
- Enter within 2–3 candles after the crossover; beyond that the trade is considered riskier.
Time / expiry
- Use clock timing so the trade expires exactly at a candle close (1-minute candle = trade expires at candle close).
- Presenter prefers clock timing slightly over a timer-mode that can extend expiry beyond candle close.
Money management and position sizing
- Reduce stake after winning trades; increase after losses (presenter recommends a Martingale-style increase after a loss).
- Examples shown: reducing stakes to ₹2,000 and then ₹1,000 after wins; using larger stakes (e.g., ₹20,000) following losses.
- Aim that across multiple trades (e.g., 5–6), 2–3 winners plus money management can make the sequence net profitable.
- Draw horizontal lines on the chart for visible support/resistance to help anticipate momentum pauses or reversals.
Key numbers, timing and examples
- EMA values: 5, 13, 55.
- Trade timeframe: 1-minute candles; enter/expire on candle close with clock timing.
- Entry window: ideally within 2–3 candles after EMA cross.
- Example stakes: ₹7,200 → ₹5,000 → ₹20,000 → ₹2,000 → ₹1,000.
- Presenter references payout/profitability percentages around “80–82%” (transcript ambiguous), typical for short-term binary/CFD-style payouts.
Risk management, cautions and trading psychology
- Emphasis on strict money management — presenter states this is key to profitability.
- Martingale-style increases after losses are recommended, but this increases the risk of large drawdowns; presenter advises tailoring steps to your capital without giving safe limits.
- Trades become riskier if you wait beyond 2–3 candles after a cross or if multiple strong candles (e.g., four strong candles) have already formed.
- EMA crosses can give false signals in choppy/volatile markets.
- Use a demo account first and practice before trading real money.
- No explicit stop-loss procedure, no risk-per-trade percentage, and no formal regulatory/financial disclaimer shown in the transcript.
Performance and outcomes shown
- In the live session shown: roughly 4–5 trades, with about 1 loss and 4 winners (according to the presenter). No systematic historical performance data, backtests, Sharpe ratio, win-rate statistics or drawdown metrics were provided — results are anecdotal.
Operational nuances: clock vs timer
- Clock timing: expiry exactly at candle close — preferred by the presenter because it ties expiry to the candle.
- Timer mode: can extend expiry beyond candle close (example: a 1-minute trade started with 9 seconds left in a candle could last 1:09), which may affect outcomes. Choice depends on which mode gives clearer analysis for you.
Disclosures, presenter recommendations and omissions
- Recommendations:
- Use a demo account first.
- Manage stake sizes: reduce after wins, increase after losses per the presenter’s Martingale approach.
- Omissions:
- No formal “not financial advice” or regulatory disclaimer in the transcript.
- No quantified position-sizing limits, no explicit stop-loss rules, and no long-term portfolio context.
Primary risks not addressed
- Martingale increases the risk of large drawdowns or account wipeout.
- No stop-loss rules or fixed risk-per-trade percentages given.
- 1-minute timeframe trading is high-frequency and carries execution risk, slippage, spread and payout variability.
Presenter / source
- Host of an Olymp Trade tutorial/demonstration video (self-identifies in the transcript; channel/host name not clearly stated). The demo/live account on-screen is the source of the rules and examples.
Category
Finance
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