AM Briefing & Live Trading
MES MICROS TRADE PLAN
THE BATTLE PLAN BUILDS PATIENCE... AND PATIENCE BUILDS WINNERS
Posted: Thursday March 26, 2026
Thursday's session opened with a sharp gap down... price laddering below the RTH low, all instruments sitting under their VWAPs, and no immediate relief for the bulls. George reviewed Wednesday's 40-point short — a clean battle plan call — and surfaced the key lesson hiding inside it: a single lotto runner from the three-contract system would have ridden all the way to target. Battle Plan Two sat in a legitimate long zone but was complicated by a descending trend line that made entries risky without a decisive break. The morning wrapped with a hard reminder about position sizing and an announcement about a new AM Briefing schedule format being tested.
📊 Trade Review: Wednesday's 40-Point Short
George opened Thursday's briefing by walking through the prior session's standout trade in detail. The 40-point short was mapped the night before and executed cleanly — but the real lesson wasn't the trade itself. It was what could have happened with a runner in play.
- The Setup: George entered short at a pre-mapped battle plan resistance level. Price moved 40 points in his favor before he exited as it began laddering back against him.
- Why He Exited: George treats shorts like microwave trades — in fast, out fast. He acknowledged being "trepidatious" with shorts, rarely holding them through counter-moves, even when structure supports it.
- The Three-Contract System Lesson: Under the three-contract system, a lotto runner (a partial position allowed to hold through normal stop-outs) would have survived the double-tap that ended George's short... and reached the full battle plan target. The exit was a win. The runner would have made it a much bigger win.
- The Double-Tap: A counter-move hit George's runner stop level, removing him from the trade before the final target was reached. This is an accepted risk of the system — but the principle stands: keeping one contract alive changes the outcome profile significantly.
- Overnight Confirmation: By Thursday morning, price had continued down and reached Battle Plan Two's target zone — the level mapped 12–15 hours earlier. The broad brush was right all along.
📉 Pre-Market & Opening Conditions
Heading into Thursday's open, every major data point on George's screen told the same story. The bulls had no foothold... and entering longs without a battle plan level was a low-probability proposition.
- Gap Down Open: ES/MES opened lower, confirming overnight selling pressure carried into the regular session.
- Below RTH Low: Price was trading under the prior session's RTH low — a clear bearish structural signal. George clarified the distinction between RTH low and IB (Initial Balance) low for members watching.
- Laddering Down: All tracked instruments were making sequential lower moves — the classic "laddering down" pattern that confirms directional bias.
- Below VWAP: ES/MES sat below the VWAP band... the Essentials Indicator showed two instruments in the lower distribution with significant red on tech. Early reads were unambiguously bearish.
- Bull Bias Assessment: Longs are counter-trend in this environment. George's rule: engage longs only at pre-mapped battle plan levels or when definitive candlestick action signals a strong reversal move.
🗺️ Battle Plan Two & The Trend Line Problem
Battle Plan Two sat in a valid long zone... but a descending trend line changed the risk equation significantly. George walked through exactly why proximity to a trend line demands extra caution — and why he preferred to see price break through with conviction before committing.
- Battle Plan Two Location: Mapped as the primary long candidate — a zone where the bulls were expected to make a stand if price dropped into it. George's notes acknowledged it was "the same tricky long that ran 60 points two nights ago."
- The Trend Line Complication: A descending trend line with multiple confirmed touch points was positioned directly above the entry zone. Entering a long with overhead trend line resistance is fighting two headwinds at once.
- George's Preference: Rather than enter long into the compressed triangle, George wanted to see price take the trend line "with a vengeance" — a decisive break and hold above it. The stop loss at the battle plan level was small... but the overhead resistance was real.
- The 60-Point Precedent: Because this level already produced a 60-point rally two nights prior, George noted it likely carries less energy for a repeat. Strong prior moves from a level can diminish its power on the next visit.
- The Preferred Scenario: George shifted focus to Battle Plan Three — further from the trend line, cleaner structure, more room to run. If price was going to cooperate, he wanted a bigger drop first.
🖌️ The Broad Brush to Fine Brush: How Battle Plan Levels Actually Work
George used an oil painting analogy to explain the two-phase nature of battle plan execution... and it's one of the clearest frameworks for understanding why the system works the way it does.
- The Broad Brush First: Battle plan levels are mapped 12–15 hours before the session opens. They represent wide strategic zones where price is expected to react. This is the first coat — rough, intentional, broad.
- The Fine Brush Next: Once price arrives at a battle plan zone, new candlestick structure is available that didn't exist when the level was drawn. That new structure — wicks, rejections, reclaims — is the fine brush. It refines the entry.
- Patience Is the Bridge: The broad brush requires patience to wait for price to come to the level. The fine brush requires skill to execute once it arrives. The battle plan connects both steps.
- Pre-Mapped vs. Real-Time: George noted this particular zone was mapped 12–15 hours before price reached it. When it did, new price action was layered on top. The plan held. The execution adapted.
⚖️ Position Sizing: The Rule That Separates Survivors from Blown Accounts
George returned to one of his foundational principles during Thursday's session... position sizing. It's not the exciting part of trading. But it's the part that keeps traders in the game.
- The Number One Mistake: Experienced long-term traders consistently point to improper sizing as the top problem with newer traders. Too large, too fast — it ends careers before they begin.
- Stick to Your Leverage Metrics: Know the maximum leverage your account can absorb and stay inside it. No exceptions based on conviction or FOMO.
- Enter One, Add to Winners: Start with a single contract and add only when the trade is working. Adding to losers compounds losses. Adding to winners compounds gains. The difference matters.
- The Three-Contract System: George was candid — he should be applying the three-contract system more consistently in his own live trading. Teaching it and living it daily are two different challenges.
- The Michael Jordan Rule: "You don't need to try to be Michael Jordan in the final three seconds." Sizing to recover losses or swing for a windfall is ego trading... not disciplined trading.
📅 AM Briefing Format: Testing a New Schedule
George announced he's testing a significant change to the AM Briefing schedule — moving from one hour before the open to 15 minutes before. He walked through the reasoning openly and invited the community to weigh in.
- The Problem: Running the briefing an hour before the open was disrupting George's pre-session trade preparation — and costing him real trade opportunities. As a trader first, that's not an acceptable trade-off.
- The New Format: Stream the AM Briefing live on YouTube for 15 minutes before the open, then switch to Zoom-only for the highest quality live session experience.
- The Benefit for Members: Traders who join late can scroll back on YouTube and catch the full briefing before engaging the live session — making the content more accessible without sacrificing quality.
- Testing Period: George planned to run the new format for at least two days before deciding permanently. Thursday was Day One of the experiment.
"No level, no trade, period. Make price come to you."
COMMON QUESTIONS FOR ES FUTURES TRADERS
What is the Three-Contract System and why does George say he should use it more consistently?
A: The Three-Contract System is a position management approach where a trader enters with multiple contracts and scales out in layers — taking profit on portions of the position while keeping a "lotto runner" alive to chase the full battle plan target. In Thursday's session, George acknowledged that a runner from Wednesday's 40-point short would have reached the full target had it remained active. He's transparent about actively working to apply the system more consistently in his own live trading, because holding a partial position to target significantly improves the trade's reward profile.
What does George mean when he says he treats shorts "like a microwave trade"?
A: A microwave trade is a short-duration, quick-exit trade — in fast, take profit fast, don't overstay. George uses this phrase to describe his psychological tendency around short positions. He acknowledges being cautious on the short side, which leads to early exits even when the structure supports holding. The "microwave" framing is self-aware — he knows this bias exists and is transparent about it with the community.
What is the "broad brush to fine brush" method for executing battle plan trades?
A: George compares battle plan preparation to oil painting. The broad brush represents the strategic zones mapped 12–15 hours before the session opens — wide areas where price is expected to react. The fine brush represents the real-time candlestick work done when price actually arrives at those zones. New price structure (wicks, rejections, reclaims) becomes available once price reaches the level, giving the trader specific entry signals that couldn't exist when the level was originally drawn. The broad level says "watch here." The fine brush says "enter now."
Why did George call Battle Plan Two a "tricky" entry on Thursday?
A: Battle Plan Two sat in a valid long zone — a level where price had previously shown strong buyer interest. However, a descending trend line with multiple confirmed touch points was sitting directly above the entry area. Entering a long trade into trend line resistance means fighting two opposing forces simultaneously: the broader downtrend and the overhead supply concentrated at the trend line. George's rule is to avoid entries already compressed against a trend line, preferring instead to wait for price to break through decisively before committing long capital.
What does "laddering down" mean and how does it affect session bias?
A: Laddering down describes a pattern where price makes a sequence of lower highs and lower lows — each move down confirming continued selling pressure. When George observes all tracked instruments laddering down, sitting below their VWAPs, and trading under prior session lows simultaneously, it establishes a clear bearish session bias. In that environment, long trades are counter-trend by definition and should only be considered at pre-mapped battle plan levels — and even then, with reduced size.
What is over-leveraging, and why does George call it "fool's gold"?
A: Over-leveraging means trading a position size too large for an account to sustain normal market drawdowns without a margin call or account blowup. George calls it "fool's gold" because it appears attractive — larger size means faster gains — but it carries account-ending risk that neutralizes any upside. The core rule is straightforward: if a position size can blow your account, it's not a valid trading size regardless of how confident you feel about the trade. Sizing properly isn't optional — it's the foundation of staying in the game.
How does using the Battle Plan app specifically improve trader patience?
A: The Battle Plan app provides pre-mapped trade levels before the session begins — specific price zones with entry criteria, targets, and stop levels already defined. This gives traders an objective, pre-built anchor rather than forcing them to make reactive decisions in real time. Instead of chasing price or entering impulsively, traders can wait for price to come to their level. George and community members Scott and Jackie discussed this dynamic directly in Thursday's session: when the plan is already in place, patience becomes the natural default.
What is a "lotto runner" and why does it matter for trade outcomes?
A: A lotto runner is a single remaining contract held after the primary position has been exited at a profit. Because the initial trade already captured gains, the runner is essentially riding on house money — its cost is already covered. It's designed to run toward a larger, pre-defined battle plan target. On Wednesday, a lotto runner from George's 40-point short would have continued down to the full battle plan target — a significantly larger move than the primary exit captured. The runner is the portion of the trade structured to deliver outsized returns when price follows through completely.
New Member Offer
50% Off Your First Month
Bronze & Silver memberships · Cancel anytime
See Trial Offers
Comments
Post a Comment