MES Micros AM Briefing * Live Trading
MES MICROS TRADE PLAN
HOLD THAT RUNNER: NAVIGATING A 150-POINT SHORT SQUEEZE
Posted: Tuesday March 31, 2025
Tuesday's session was defined almost entirely by one thing: a massive short covering move that built overnight from a Battle Plan Level 2 entry and extended well into the RTH open — producing a 150-point rally from the overnight low and over 125 points of open profit from the original entry. The primary directive for the session was simple and unrelenting — hold the runner, let the system work, and do not counter the squeeze. George walked members through the full overnight trade recap, runner management principles, the mechanics of adding to a winner, and the discipline required to keep your platform closed when price is not at a battle plan level. For those who kept their hands off and held their runners, this was exactly the kind of payoff week the system is built for.
📊 Market Context — Bears Still Control, But the Squeeze Was Real
Despite the violent upside move, George was clear and consistent: the bears have not relinquished control. The current rally is short covering — not a bull takeover. That distinction matters for how you manage every trade decision on a day like this.
- Double Parabolic Down Move: ES/MES had been in a sustained cascading down move, laddering lower with each failed recovery. George had been charting this structure daily, noting that violent down moves eventually produce the most powerful long setups.
- Trend Line Break and Backtest: A key descending trend line that had capped price was finally broken. Price then pulled back and retested the trend line beautifully — a textbook confirmation move — before launching higher. George noted this as validation that the trend line was drawn correctly.
- Short Covering vs. Bull Control: The 150-point rally does not mean bulls are in control. Break levels tell the story. Bears still control the larger structure, and the squeeze was driven by trapped shorts being forced to cover — not by fresh institutional buying. Understanding this distinction prevents dangerous assumption-making about new trend direction.
- Halfback Target: The first major upside target is the halfback of the large "vomit move" — the midpoint of the entire cascading down range. George noted that as of the session, price had not yet retraced even half of that move. Beyond the RTH gap fill and the broken trend line, halfback remains the longer-term runner target.
- Stacked Targets: George outlined a clean three-target sequence for the runner: (1) the unfilled RTH gap down (also coinciding with the weekly low), (2) the retested descending trend line, and (3) halfback of the full down move — estimated at roughly 70–80 additional points from mid-session levels.
📋 The Battle Plan Trade — Overnight Long Recap
The centerpiece of Tuesday's session was not an RTH trade — it was an ETH entry taken the previous night at Battle Plan Level 2. George walked members through every decision point in real time, showing how the Three-Contract System and the ladder approach played out from entry to runner.
- Battle Plan Level 2 (BP2) Setup: George identified BP2 as a high-probability reaction zone. As price dropped into the level overnight, he posted in the group: "Man your battle stations — we're dropping into BP2." This is the standard protocol when price approaches a preferred battle plan entry.
- First Ladder Entry: George took the first ladder long at 64, with an initial stop at breakeven after the position moved in his favor. This is the first rung of the laddering sequence — a defined entry with a clear invalidation, not a prediction trade.
- Adding to a Winner: Once the trade moved 30 points in his direction and was carrying no risk, George added a contract at market. This is a core principle: when you are up 30 points and the trade is confirmed, adding a contract is low-risk because the original position provides the cushion.
- Taking Profits at BP1: When price reached Battle Plan Level 1 — a zone where a potential reversal and return to bear control was possible — George exited two contracts. Total captured on those contracts: approximately 45 points each. This is the disciplined process: the system maps out not just where to enter, but where to exit intelligently.
- Holding the Single Runner: One contract remained as a runner with no fixed target. From the original entry, this runner was up 125+ points by mid-session. George moved the stop 5–10 points under each new swing low as price laddered higher, playing "perfect chess" with the position.
- ES Traders — Deleveraging to MES: George noted that for traders with larger ES contracts, one technique for staying in a big move is to take profit on the ES contract and immediately enter the equivalent position in MES. This deleverages the position, reduces margin pressure, and allows continued participation without the full risk of the larger contract.
🏃 Runner Management — Playing Perfect Chess
Once a trade is in significant profit and the system has confirmed the move, the job changes entirely. You are no longer managing a trade — you are managing a runner. The rules are different, and the discipline required is different. Tuesday was a masterclass in exactly that.
- The Only Job: "Hold that runner." George repeated this throughout the session. There is no analysis required. No new setups to hunt. No levels to obsess over. The runner is the position — everything else is noise until price reaches a meaningful reaction zone.
- Trailing the Stop: Rather than setting a hard profit target, George moved his stop 5–10 points underneath each new confirmed swing low. As price laddered up and established new lows, the stop followed. This approach locks in profit progressively without capping the upside.
- No Upside Target — It's Short Covering: George explicitly declined to set a fixed upside target, because in a short covering move, the fuel is forced liquidation of trapped shorts — not organic buying. That type of move can extend far beyond what any technical level would suggest. Setting a rigid target during short covering is a mistake.
- Adding Opportunities Mid-Session: George watched for pullbacks into strong levels as potential add-on locations — specifically looking for a reclaim of a strong level after price grabbed the IB low. He had an add-on order at 58, then adjusted to a reclaim setup. The add-on ultimately missed by a tick. This is normal and expected — not every add-on fills, and that is fine.
- Funded Account Considerations: For traders in funded accounts with daily profit caps or maximum trailing drawdown rules, George acknowledged the need to take profits at strong levels even if the runner still has room. Peeling contracts at strong levels, then reloading on confirmed pullbacks, is a practical funded-account strategy that keeps risk controlled while preserving participation.
⚠️ Counter-Trading Discipline — Two Rules You Cannot Break
Every short covering rally attracts traders who want to pick the top. George has watched this pattern play out hundreds of times, and his coaching was direct: during short covering, do not short. During a vomit move, do not knife catch. These are not suggestions — they are system rules.
- The Two Violent Moves Rule: George identified two market conditions where levels become largely irrelevant: (1) when price is vomiting (fast sustained selling) and (2) when price is in short covering. In both cases, "level, schmevel" — the normal technical playbook gets overwhelmed by the magnitude and momentum of forced positioning.
- One and Done — If You Must: If a trader is determined to attempt a counter-trade during short covering, the only acceptable approach is one entry, one level, small stop, and immediate exit if it doesn't work. No averaging. No second try. One and done. Pick your level with a tight stop, and if it fails, walk away.
- Two Losers = Platform Closed: This is a firm rule. If you have taken two losses on the wrong side of a short squeeze, you must close your platform. Not pause, not reduce size — close it. Opening it again only happens when price returns to a battle plan location.
- The Short Seller Trap: As George noted from the Sunday Battle Plan, a massive short squeeze is every short trader's worst nightmare. Many traders who are positioned short cannot psychologically switch long. Instead, they sit through the squeeze looking for a place to re-short — compounding losses and missing the real move. Awareness of this trap is the first step to avoiding it.
- One Valid Short Setup — Losing the Opening: The only short scenario George discussed with genuine conviction during RTH: if price loses the session opening price, that creates an opportunity to target the POC below. Short entries inside the fair value gap, with stops just above the gap closure, were noted as reasonable — but only after that specific trigger, and only with a clear exit plan.
- Invert Your Chart: For traders who struggle with bias — consistently shorting in a bull squeeze or going long in a vomit — George recommended a practical TradingView trick: press Alt+I (Windows) or Option+I (Mac) to invert the chart. Seeing the same structure from the opposite direction can break the psychological pattern and reveal the correct directional bias.
🧠 Session Discipline — Friday Rules, Stop Times, and Platform Hygiene
Big winning days create their own kind of risk: the temptation to press, overtrade, or give back gains chasing a move that's already run. George addressed this directly, encouraging members who had a strong Monday and Tuesday to begin applying Friday rules immediately.
- Friday Rules Mid-Week: If you've had two strong days — big wins on the Battle Plan trades — George recommended adopting "Friday rules" beginning Tuesday. Friday rules mean: one entry per day maximum, and it must be something extraordinary to justify it. The goal is protecting the week, not adding to it recklessly.
- Stop Trading at Your Designated Hour: George has a set stop time and honored it even with an active runner. The instruction: "Only trade your best trading hours. Take a break. Walk away. Be done." This applies regardless of what the market is doing. A runner manages itself — your job is to not interfere with it after your session ends.
- Patience Across Slow Weeks: Last week featured repeated small longs with no follow-through. Many traders questioned their plan, their bias, their system. George's response: the Battle Plan trades exist precisely for moments like Tuesday. You do not abandon a working system during slow weeks — you stay disciplined and wait. The big moves pay for everything.
- TradingView Alerts for Battle Plan Levels: George recommended setting price alerts on TradingView 10–15 points before a Battle Plan preferred trade level, so traders are notified before price arrives — not after. The Discord group also receives alerts for the most critical setups.
- No High Probability Trades Expected Tonight: With price up 150 points from the overnight low and well off the Battle Plan structure, George stated clearly: he does not expect any high probability Battle Plan trades for Tuesday night's post. The market needs time to digest before a clean setup re-emerges.
"This is what we trade for. You might not get this move for a whole week — which was last week. You keep being patient. You keep trading your system."
COMMON QUESTIONS FOR ES FUTURES TRADERS
What is a short covering move, and why is it different from a regular bull move?
A: A short covering move happens when traders who are positioned short (betting on price falling) are forced to buy back their contracts to close those positions — either because the trade hit their stop loss or their account can no longer tolerate the loss. This buying is not driven by conviction that price will go higher; it is forced liquidation. The result is a rapid, often violent surge upward that can extend well beyond any technical level. George emphasizes this distinction because it changes how you manage positions: in a short squeeze, normal resistance levels are frequently blown through, targeting is less reliable, and counter-trading is extremely dangerous. "Level, schmevel" — the technical playbook gets temporarily overridden by the magnitude of forced positioning.
What is the Battle Plan ladder system, and how does it work?
A: The Battle Plan ladder system is a structured entry method built around pre-identified price levels called Battle Plan Levels (BP1–BP5). Each level represents a zone where price has a high probability of reacting. Rather than entering with a full position all at once, traders take a "first ladder" at the initial level, confirm that the trade is moving in their favor, and then consider adding additional contracts (second ladder, third ladder) as price confirms direction. This approach reduces risk on the initial entry and creates a framework for scaling into a winning trade rather than guessing the perfect single entry.
How did Monday night's Battle Plan trade work, and what was the final result?
A: Price dropped into Battle Plan Level 2 (BP2) during the overnight ETH session. George took a first ladder long at 64, with an initial stop at breakeven once the trade moved favorably. After the position moved 30 points in his favor — carrying no meaningful risk — he added a contract at market. As price approached Battle Plan Level 1 (BP1), a zone where a potential reversal was possible, he exited two contracts for approximately 45 points each. One runner remained with a trailing stop placed 5–10 points beneath each new swing low. By mid-session Tuesday, the runner was up over 125 points from the original entry, with three stacked upside targets remaining: the unfilled RTH gap, the retested trend line, and the halfback of the full down move.
What are Friday Rules, and when should a trader apply them mid-week?
A: Friday Rules are a set of trading discipline guidelines George applies on Fridays — or any day where the primary goal shifts from making money to protecting money already made. Under Friday Rules, a trader limits themselves to one entry per day maximum, and that entry must meet a very high bar to justify taking it. George recommended that traders who had strong days on both Monday and Tuesday begin applying Friday Rules immediately on Tuesday afternoon — not waiting for Friday. After two consecutive winning sessions with significant gains, the risk of giving back profits through overtrading or chasing moves far outweighs the potential reward of forcing additional trades.
What is halfback, and why is it significant as an upside target?
A: Halfback refers to the 50% retracement level of a major price move. In this context, the "vomit move" — the large, rapid sell-off that preceded the current short squeeze — has a defined high and low. The midpoint of that full range is halfback. George notes that halfback is a significant magnetic level because it represents where the market has retraced exactly half of its major move, making it a natural area of resistance and a logical profit target for runners. As of Tuesday's session, price had not yet reached halfback, leaving meaningful upside remaining for those holding runners. Halfback also coincides with another descending trend line, adding technical confluence to the level.
What is the Two Losers Rule for counter-trading?
A: The Two Losers Rule is a hard stop on counter-trading. If a trader takes a position against the prevailing move — for example, shorting during a short covering rally — and that trade results in a loss, they may attempt one more time with a small, surgical entry. If that second counter-trade also results in a loss, trading must stop for the session. No exceptions. The rule exists because counter-trading a strong directional move is inherently low-probability, and repeated losses in the same direction indicate the market is not ready to reverse. Continuing to trade in that scenario compounds losses and damages both the account and the trader's psychology.
How do you manage a runner with intraday trailing drawdown in a funded account?
A: Funded accounts with intraday trailing drawdown rules require a more active approach to managing a large runner. As price reaches strong levels, George recommends peeling contracts — taking partial profits — to reduce the amount of open profit that is at risk of being lost to the trailing drawdown calculation. After peeling, if price pulls back and confirms a new entry, the trader can reload one or more contracts at the new location. This peel-and-reload strategy keeps the account in compliance with drawdown rules while preserving participation in the ongoing move. The key is that peeling at strong levels is not giving up on the trade — it is trading within the constraints of the account structure.
What is the chart inversion technique, and how does it help with bias?
A: Chart inversion is a TradingView feature that flips the chart upside down, making what was a downtrend appear as an uptrend and vice versa. The keyboard shortcut is Alt+I on Windows or Option+I on Mac. George uses this technique with traders who have a persistent directional bias — for example, someone who consistently shorts bounces but struggles to identify long entries. By inverting the chart, the trader sees the same price structure from the opposite perspective, which can reveal entry patterns they were previously blind to. It is also a useful exercise for learning to mark both sides of a setup with equal objectivity.
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