30-Point ES Short Setup
MES MICROS TRADE PLAN
Patience Paid: How Waiting for Fresh Levels Delivered a 20-Point Short
Posted: Monday May 19, 2026
Monday's AM Briefing was a masterclass in patience, level reading, and knowing when to stand down. The ES MES micro futures market opened directly into the drop zone — but the Bull Bear Line had been beaten up for two sessions straight, and George refused to force a trade in stale territory. When the short finally set up from the strong range, it executed cleanly to target. The session produced three journalable setups, a live 20-point short called in real time, and some of the sharpest futures trading psychology coaching of the week — proof that keeping you on the right side of price action matters more than finding an entry every day.
Community Spotlight — Together We Trade Better
The session opened with two stories that sum up why this group works. Scott asked Laxmi in Discord: "Were you able to keep your platform closed and enjoy your 20-point morning?" Laxmi replied: "Yes, thanks for the motivation and advice from the group." That exchange is the whole philosophy in two sentences.
On Zoom, Laxmi turned a clean 10-point long call into 25 points — then closed his platform on George's advice. Tim showed up to the room after already hitting his daily goal from the morning session. Two traders, same lesson: make your points, close your platform, walk away.
- Laxmi's Long: Called live on Zoom from a strong level reclaim. Laxmi captured 25 points, stopped right under the strong level as suggested, and closed the platform. He credited the group's motivation for holding the discipline.
- Tim's Morning: Already made his day's wage before the Zoom room opened. George's advice: take your points and zoom way out. If price gets to a mapped location, engage. If not, the platform stays closed.
- Scott's Role: Accountability from a fellow member — not George, not a coach. That's the community doing exactly what it was built to do.
Trader Lesson 1
After a beautiful winning trade, close your platform. Go for a walk. Leave your phone. The best thing you can do on an emotional high is remove the opportunity to give the money back.
Not Every Day Is a Trading Day
Yesterday's ES futures session was characterized by erratic price action — nothing, nothing, nothing, then a 35-point candle out of nowhere. That environment is a tell. George flagged it in Zoom, YouTube, and Discord before it happened. When price behaves like that, the right move is often no move at all.
George put it plainly: every day the market is a different date. Some days are your type. Some days aren't. A 35-point random candle is not the type you bring home to Mama. Knowing that in advance is the edge.
- Yesterday's Accumulation: Battle Plan levels delivered 60 available points across Sunday and Monday for those who took the entries. Zoom produced 10+ points live. Core Strategy offered clean backside trades for full members.
- The Tell: Erratic point-candle price action with no follow-through. If you don't like what price is doing, close everything down and come back tomorrow.
- Weekly Goal Mindset: George's target is 50 points for the week — not 10 per day, not a trade every session. Monday, Tuesday, one big trade, five small ones — it doesn't matter as long as the points are clean.
- Upcoming Catalyst: FOMC minutes arrive tomorrow afternoon. Plan your risk settings accordingly.
Trader Lesson 2
You don't need a trade every day. You need a good trade. Know what price action you like — and when you're not seeing it, stay out. Come back tomorrow. There is always another high-probability trade around the corner.
Stealing Bounce Power — Why Fresh Levels Win
One of the most repeated concepts this session was "stealing bounce power." When price visits a level multiple times without a clean reaction, it drains momentum from that zone. Each tap without follow-through takes energy away from the next attempt. George said it plainly: the odds would have been much better on the first touch.
The Bull Bear Line had been tapped all day Monday and overnight. By Tuesday morning it had absorbed so many attempts that George said he could draw a rectangle over the price action at 100% opacity and simply not watch it. That's not hyperbole — it's a legitimate technique for controlling your behavior at overworked levels.
- Stealing Bounce Power Defined: Each time price touches a key level without a clean, snappy reaction, it removes some of the momentum available for the next touch. More taps, less energy, lower probability of a clean trade.
- Fresh vs. Beat-Up: "It's easier to trade a fresh level." A level price hasn't visited holds full potential energy. A level that's been tapped six times does not.
- The Rectangle Technique: Draw a rectangle over price action you've decided to ignore. Set fill opacity to 100%. If you've committed to skipping a zone, block it visually. Removes the temptation entirely.
- Apex Exception: Even in a beat-up zone, the apex of the Battle Plan 2 triangle offered a clean small-stop long. George had it in the published notes: "I would trade the apex of Battle Plan 2 with a small stop." It paid nearly 20 points.
Trader Lesson 3
When a level has been tapped multiple times without follow-through, lower your expectations for the next attempt. Each touch steals bounce power. The best ES futures setups come from fresh levels — price visiting for the first time, not the fifth.
Live Trade Execution — The Short That Paid
The signature trade of the session was a live short called out in real time from the strong range area. George had pre-mapped the setup: if price failed to reclaim the strong range and pulled back in, a short targeting Battle Plan 3 and Battle Plan 4 made sense. When the setup confirmed, he entered short at 86 with a stop at break-even and a minimum target of 60 — a 26-point move. He took 20.
The trade executed exactly as mapped. Failed at the range once. Failed twice. Price pulled back into the strong range on a re-tap. George re-entered and let it run. For traders with multiple contracts, he called the peel location in advance — near the 60 level at first target.
- Entry: Short from 86, on a re-tap of the strong range after repeated failures to reclaim. Three contracts queued at different prices — only one filled.
- Stop Management: Moved to break-even after the trade moved in favor, then to a 10-point lock. "I will be vigilant. Because I am counter."
- First Target (60 Area): Battle Plan 3 zone. George called the multi-contract peel location before price arrived — great place to take off lead contracts.
- Second Target: Battle Plan 4 — the preferred trade location for the day. Not reached in this session.
- Exit: 20 points captured. "I treat shorts like microwave trades. They're just scalps for me."
- Re-entry Rule: George took break-even on the first attempt, then re-entered on the second tap. He did what he said he was going to do — then made the disciplined re-entry when the setup repeated.
Trader Lesson 4
When trading counter-trend, treat it like a microwave trade. Set your target. Move your stop to break-even early. If you have multiple contracts, peel at first target and keep a single lotto runner. Do not overstay a counter-trend position.
Touch-and-Go: Right Away or Right Out
After the short, George attempted a long at Battle Plan 3. He got a snappy move, entered — and the trade pulled back hard. He was out at break-even. No second-guessing. "I want it to touch and go. Otherwise, Battle Plan 4." That's not hesitation — that's the system working exactly as designed.
His standard for every Battle Plan long: it needs to work right away. Not in five minutes. Not after a retrace. Right away. If you're questioning whether it's working, it probably isn't. The best ES futures setups are obvious — and they're profitable immediately.
- Touch-and-Go Defined: Price touches the Battle Plan level and immediately ladders back. Clean, fast, no chop. If it doesn't do that on contact, the probability has already dropped.
- The Battle Plan 3 Attempt: Got above the strong level, showed a snappy move, then pulled back hard. George was out at break-even. "That would have gotten me out for sure, even if I'd have held better."
- Why Break-Even Is a Win: A scratch in a beat-up zone with a setup that didn't follow through is exactly what the rule protects you from. Small losses and break-evens preserve capital for the next clean trade.
- The Better Trade: Battle Plan 4 — marked in green as the preferred trade for the day. Still nearly 100 points away. The patience to wait for it is the edge.
Trader Lesson 5
The best setups work right away. If you're hunting for the entry, talking yourself into it, or waiting for the trade to start working — it's probably not the trade. Right away or right out. Move on to the next mapped location.
Self-Control Is Not Optional
George opened the session with a weekly focus: perfect discipline — wait, wait, wait, hold, hold, hold. Then he pulled up a reminder pinned to his chart: "The fruit of the spirit is self-control. Self-control is not optional. You want to be a trader, you must become a self-controlled person." That's not motivational filler. That's the actual edge in futures trading psychology.
Every theme in Monday's session traced back to self-control. Laxmi closing his platform. Tim not needing another trade. George waiting for Battle Plan 4 instead of chasing. The discipline to sit on your hands in choppy price action is the same discipline that keeps you in clean trades long enough to reach target.
- Weekly Goal Framework: 50 points for the week — not 10 per day, not a trade per session. By any combination of days and setups. Clean points only.
- Green Over Greed: George's daily mission is not to find an entry — it's to keep traders on the right side of price action. Whether or not an entry materializes is secondary to that goal.
- Platform Management: Close it after a win. Reopen it when a mapped trade location arrives. "It takes 30 seconds to load your platform. Sometimes that little buffer zone is important."
- Journaling Tool — Object Tree Folders: In TradingView, set your Object Tree to auto-sort drawings into day-of-week folders (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday…). Yesterday's trade review is one folder toggle away. Clean, organized, and easy to journal.
Trader Lesson 6
Self-control is not optional in futures trading. Every time you override your rules, you're not trading the plan — you're trading emotion. Discipline isn't a personality trait you either have or don't. It's a skill you practice every single session.
"I trade what happens, not what I want to happen."
COMMON QUESTIONS FOR ES FUTURES TRADERS
What does "stealing bounce power" mean in ES futures trading?
A: Every time price touches a key level without a clean, snappy reaction, it removes some of the momentum available for the next attempt. Think of bounce power as stored energy at a level — each tap without follow-through drains that energy. After several touches, the level is "beat up" and the probability of a clean trade off it drops significantly. Fresh levels — ones price hasn't visited recently — carry the most potential energy and the highest probability of a strong reaction.
What is a touch-and-go trade signature?
A: A touch-and-go is George's preferred entry signal — price touches a mapped Battle Plan level and immediately begins laddering back in the anticipated direction, with no extended chop or sideways action. If price touches the level and immediately moves cleanly, that's the signature. If it lingers, fails to follow through, or churns around the level, the touch-and-go signal is absent and the trade is passed. The rule is simple: right away or right out.
What does "Bulls control, shorts are counter, small if at all" mean for position sizing?
A: This is Micros Trader's core directional bias statement. In a bull market or uptrending environment, long trades are with the dominant trend — they get full size and full patience. Short trades are counter-trend and carry inherently lower probability and shorter duration. "Small if at all" means use reduced contract size on shorts, set tighter targets, move stops to break-even faster, and treat them like quick scalps rather than swing trades. George calls shorts "microwave trades" — fast in, fast out.
What is the Bull Bear Line and how is it used?
A: The Bull Bear Line is a key dividing level that separates bullish price action from bearish. When price is above it, bulls are in control and long trades are favored. When price is below it, shorts are favored. In Monday's session, the Bull Bear Line was tested repeatedly overnight and through the morning session — becoming a heavily beat-up level by the time RTH opened. George's read: the line had absorbed too many taps to offer a clean trade. He wanted price to drop deeper to Battle Plan 3 or Battle Plan 4 before re-engaging.
How does the Battle Plan tiered system work?
A: The Battle Plan is a daily pre-market trade plan that maps tiered entry locations — typically Battle Plan 1 through 5 or 6. Each tier represents a price zone where George believes a high-probability setup may develop, with detailed notes on what he needs to see before entering. Lower-numbered plans are closer to current price; higher-numbered plans are deeper and often carry stronger conviction. In Monday's session, Battle Plan 4 was George's preferred trade (marked in green) — a nearly 100-point drop from the open — because it represented a fresh, untouched level with full bounce power.
What is an apex entry and when is it used?
A: The apex is the tip of the Battle Plan triangle indicator — the precise convergence point of the mapped zone. When a level is beat up and George doesn't want to commit to a full-size entry at the standard zone, the apex offers a tighter, higher-precision alternative with a smaller stop. In Monday's session, the Battle Plan 2 apex paid nearly 20 points while George was still talking through the setup. His published note read: "I would trade the apex of Battle Plan 2 with a small stop." It's a lower-size, higher-precision play for zones that have seen heavy traffic.
What is a lotto runner and when should you keep one?
A: A lotto runner is a single remaining contract held after you've already peeled profits on your lead contracts. It's kept on a loose stop — sometimes at break-even — to capture a potential extended move to a deeper target. In Monday's short trade, the suggested approach was to peel lead contracts near the 60-level first target, then hold a single runner in case price continued to Battle Plan 4. The lotto runner costs nothing if it gets stopped at break-even, but can deliver significant additional points if the extended move materializes.
Why does George close his trading platform after taking profits?
A: After a winning trade, traders are on an emotional high that can impair judgment and lead to overtrading, revenge trading, or chasing setups that don't meet the plan's criteria. Closing the platform physically removes the opportunity to give profits back. George's recommendation: step away, go for a walk, leave your phone behind, and reopen only when price reaches a new mapped Battle Plan location. It takes 30 seconds to reload the platform — that buffer is a real edge, not a crutch.
What is snappy ladder-back price action and why does it matter?
A: Snappy ladder-back price action is a clean, sequential move back in the intended direction after touching a key level — no chop, no sideways drift, just immediate and decisive price movement that confirms the level is being respected. Each "rung" of the ladder is a higher low (for longs) or lower high (for shorts), building momentum. George looks for this signature before committing to a trade at a Battle Plan location. Without it, particularly at beat-up levels, the probability of a sustained move is too low. If the snappy signature isn't present, he stands down and waits for the next tier.
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