Video summary

Пампы в крипте | Как находить пампы заранее и не заходить на хаях

Main summary

Key takeaways

Finance

Finance-focused summary (crypto trading indicator guide)

What the video is about

The presenter (Midas channel) explains how to use a “Pamp/Damp” pump indicator in TradingView to find abnormal “pump → fast rollback” setups early. The emphasis is on avoiding entries near local highs and instead acting when the reversal begins.

Core market/strategy idea

  • Standard trend indicators produce many signals; this indicator is designed to produce very few.
  • It targets “needle-in-a-haystack” scenarios: in a large universe of coins, it flags only when price makes an impulsive pump, followed by a rollback/reversal signal.
  • The indicator is primarily intended for shorting after sharp upward pumps in certain market regimes (described as a “bull market / collapse of alts,” where many pumps are expected to retrace).

Tickers / assets / instruments mentioned

  • Crypto tickers/coins (examples referenced): GTO (and GTO coin used in examples)
  • Bitcoin dominance (macro proxy mentioned; no ticker given)
  • TradingView universe: 500+ coins (around 600 mentioned)
  • No specific exchanges or additional tokens were clearly specified beyond references to “coins,” but the presenter also mentions:
    • Forex pairs / currency pairs
    • Stocks (including references to Moscow Exchange and RTS)
    • Commodities
    • “Fanda” (likely intended to mean futures/intraday; wording unclear)

Step-by-step methodology / framework (indicator setup & use)

1) Use the screener universe

  • Maintain a list of 500–600 tickers.
  • Monitor them on a 5-minute timeframe (per indicator configuration).

2) Configure Block 1 (momentum / pump detection)

  • Filter out sideways/noisy regimes to avoid unclear patterns that cause stop-outs and wasted time.
  • Set the minimum pump size (default emphasis: ≥ 10% on 5 minutes).
  • Set how many candles the pump must take (minimum/threshold).
  • Set a constraint for how soon the rollback/reversal signal must appear (described as “within the 10th candle,” part of a “three tens” concept).

3) Configure Block 2 (signal generation / execution logic)

  • Choose signal mode:
    • Default: “beginning of rollback” after pump conditions are met.
    • Alternative: “rebounce-from-level” logic tied to specific liquidity/price levels.
  • Configure:
    • Take-profit targets based on liquidity zones / heatmap
    • Stop-loss and risk controls
    • Trailing stop and/or moving stop to breakeven after take #1

4) Trade using indicator signals + confirmation

  • The indicator does not independently decide entry/exit; it provides signals on rollback candles.
  • The presenter recommends combining signals with additional analysis (referencing “Midas Touch” and other indicators such as “upper and lower indicators”).

5) Use built-in statistics as guidance only

  • Winrate/take outcomes are used mainly to compare settings and understand rough behavior—not as exact backtest results.

Key numbers / thresholds / settings called out

Pump detection (Block 1)

  • Timeframe used in examples: 5-minute
  • Minimum pump size (default): 10%
    • Rationale: 10% is “optimal” on 5 minutes; on higher timeframes it becomes too easy/trivial.
  • Impulse candle count constraints:
    • If 10% happens in ~8–9 candles, it still qualifies.
    • If 10% requires ~15 candles, it’s considered not an “impulse” (too slow).
  • Rollback timing (“three tens” concept):
    • Rollback signals should arrive no later than the 10th candle after pump criteria are met.
    • If the rollback appears later (e.g., 15th candle), the presenter claims sharp rollback likelihood decreases.

Risk / take-profit framework

  • Risk unit / ladder example:
    • If stop = $100 risk, targets are $100 / $200 / $300 (a 1x/2x/3x ladder).
  • Risk-reward guidance:
    • Avoid trades where the risk-reward is worse than ~1:3.
  • Stop-loss sizing (volatility/ATR-based):
    • Higher volatility → wider stop to reduce random stop-outs.
  • Trailing stop / breakeven:
    • Move stop to breakeven after take #1
    • Optionally enable trailing to avoid giving back profits.

Signal filtering by winrate

  • Optional filter: ignore assets whose recent winrate is below a threshold.
  • Defaults/suggestions:
    • Default test value: 50%
    • Alternative for fewer, higher-confidence signals: 70%
  • Goal: skip coins where base settings “don’t work.”

Explicit recommendations / cautions

  • Primary caution: signals indicate rollback start, not guaranteed profit. Avoid “blind” reliance.
  • No “magic strategy”: repeated emphasis that results depend on risk management (stops + trailing) and correct setup.
  • Don’t treat statistics as exact performance:
    • The stats table is described as rough, and the presenter notes simplified testing won’t match real execution.
  • Signal timing / repainting emphasis:
    • The signal is described as being given at candle close (or immediately at the next candle open) to avoid repaint-like issues.
    • Claim: the indicator does not repaint in “Midas or Pampas.”

Disclosures / disclaimers

  • Implied disclaimer: the presenter says “this is not a strategy” and asks viewers not to treat it as the most reliable tool.
  • The provided subtitles do not include an explicit “not financial advice” phrase, but multiple cautions advise viewers to avoid blindly trusting stats and to make decisions themselves.

Presenters / sources

  • Presenter/source: Midas channel (references to running “Midas,” plus “Trading Academy,” “Midas Touch,” and VIP/community support)
  • Product/brand referenced: Pamp/Damp pump indicator and related TradingView screeners
  • No other clearly identifiable external individual/company attribution is present in the subtitles (aside from a mention of “Sveta” sharing winrate experience, but not as a full external source).

Original video