AM Briefing number 788, ES Chart Technical Analysis

MES MICROS TRADE PLAN

Mapped Levels Work — Stay Patient and Let the Trade Come to You

Posted: Tuesday June 10, 2026

☀️ AM BRIEFING

Yesterday's session proved what the MES micro futures trade plan is built on — mapped levels work, and they work multiple times. Battle Plans 3, 4, and 5 all produced profitable opportunities, with BP4 delivering a clean 29-point move from the drop zone as the preferred trade. Community member Justin put up a $10K day using the same system, a reminder that this is about your trading, not George's. The session also drove home two discipline principles that separate good trading weeks from great ones: trust the mapped levels and stay in your winners as long as possible. Week-to-date the system is up at least 180 points, and today's key level is clear — the bottom of the range defended on the live CPI candle.

Session Recap: Battle Plans 3, 4, and 5

All three active Battle Plan levels produced tradeable setups in yesterday's ES futures daily trade session — and each one rewarded traders who waited for the exact location. The drop zones held at every level. Here's what happened:

  • Battle Plan 3: Price reclaimed levels above BP3. The notes called for adding to a winning trade on continuation. The move didn't follow through — the push south resumed. But the reclaim itself offered an opportunity for patient traders.
  • Battle Plan 4 (Preferred Trade): The top-of-list setup — in green, dropped clean into the drop zone, laddered in beautifully. Ran 29 points. Scott peeled 10 and 10, made 20 points, and got out on the lotto runner. Clean execution off a clean setup.
  • Battle Plan 5: The monster move. Once price reached BP5 and started reversing, aggressive traders could layer entries at each reclaimed level on the way back up — a 100-point move unfolded from there.

The drop zones were accurate at all three levels. That is not luck — that is preparation. The map was right before the market opened.

Trader Lesson 1

Trust the levels you mapped before the open. When all three Battle Plan drop zones hold and produce moves, the system is doing its job. Your job is to wait at the location — not manufacture entries between them.

Reclaiming Levels: One Map, Multiple Opportunities

A Battle Plan level doesn't expire after the first touch. As price worked from BP3 down to BP4, then down to BP5, and then reversed back up — every level it reclaimed on the way back was a re-entry opportunity. The map kept giving. This is the laddering concept in action.

  • BP3 area on reclaim: Didn't follow through on the initial short — but offered a long re-entry as price climbed back through the level heading higher.
  • BP4 area on reclaim: Same dynamic. A second opportunity appeared as price moved back up through an already-mapped zone.
  • BP5 as the base: The aggressive trader who entered at BP5 and added at each reclaimed level above it turned the 100-point reversal into a monster day.

You are not guessing where price goes. You are systematically re-entering at levels the Battle Plan already identified — as price confirms the direction. That is the difference between trading and gambling.

Trader Lesson 2

When a Battle Plan level does not follow through on first touch, watch for the reclaim on the reversal — it becomes a valid entry again. One map can produce three profitable trades if you stay engaged and patient at each level.

Trade Duration: Hold Winners Long, Cut Losers Fast

The most powerful futures trading psychology principle George covered in this session is also the simplest: the length of time you hold a winner should be much longer than the length of time you hold a loser. Review your own trade log. If the ratio is reversed, that is the problem to fix.

  • In a winning trade: Stay as long as the system allows. You are already right. You do not need another trade — you need to hold the one you have. Add to it if the rules allow.
  • In a losing trade: Get out quickly. If you are wrong, be wrong fast. A series of breakeven stops over five hours is mentally exhausting and not worth the drawdown.
  • Add-ons that turn to losses: No big deal. George added to a winning trade and the add-on closed at a loss. The original trade was still a winner. Add-ons are part of the process — not every one will work.
"Our goal is to stay in a winning trade for as long as we can. You're already in a winning trade. You don't need another trade."

Trader Lesson 3

Pull your last 20 trades. If your losing trades lasted longer than your winning trades on average, that is the single most important thing to fix. Flip the ratio — and your results will follow.

Elevated Risk Days: The 15-Point Candle Rule

Yesterday featured 15-point red candles — the type of market environment that triggers the Stand Down rule in the Core Strategy. When individual candles are that large, slippage is elevated, stops are harder to manage, and the margin for error shrinks dramatically. The Core Strategy scored zero for the session in these conditions. That is by design.

  • What it means: If you are seeing 15-point individual candles, you are in elevated risk territory. The Core Strategy says stand down — do not force trades.
  • If you trade anyway: You must be at exact Battle Plan locations. Not near them. Not close enough. Exact.
  • Trade small: Reduce your size. A 100-point move on one MES contract is still a very good day. You do not need to size up to profit — the move does the work for you.
  • Manage your stop first: Before entry, confirm you can handle the stop at your intended size. If you cannot, go smaller — or stand down entirely.
Core Strategy scores zero on 15-point candle days — and that is a win. Standing down on the wrong day protects your account for the right day.

Trader Lesson 4

On elevated risk days with large candles, the rule is simple: trade the exact Battle Plan location or do not trade at all. And if you trade, go small. The move size compensates for the reduced contracts — you can still have a great day.

Key Level for Today's Session

After the CPI candle dropped straight to the bottom of the range and defended it perfectly — a textbook drop zone reaction — the level structure going into today is clean. The bottom of the range is the key level. Here is how to use it:

  • Key Support: Bottom of yesterday's range. Defended multiple times throughout the session, including on the live CPI candle drop. This is the level that matters today.
  • If trading independently: Watch for price to hold above this level and reclaim it. If it does, look long targeting the top of the range.
  • Caution around data: George had his platform closed for the CPI candle. He was watching for the love of price action — not to trade it. Be disciplined around economic events.

Week-to-date the ES futures key levels and trade setups have produced at least 180 points, driven primarily by the short. The Battle Plan is working. Show up, wait for your location, and execute.

"Before I knew it, that was up a hundred points. You can do very, very well trading small."

❓ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

COMMON QUESTIONS FOR ES FUTURES TRADERS

What is a Battle Plan drop zone?

A: A drop zone is a price area on the Battle Plan where George expects price to pull back into before offering a trade entry. When price "drops into" this zone, it signals that the level has been tested and may be ready to reverse. Drop zones are marked on the chart and correspond to each numbered Battle Plan level (BP1 through BP5). When price enters a green-labeled drop zone, that is considered the preferred trade setup for the session.

What is the 15-Point Candle Rule?

A: The 15-Point Candle Rule refers to market conditions where individual price candles are moving 15 or more points in a single bar. This signals elevated volatility and risk. In these conditions, the Core Strategy rule is to Stand Down — meaning do not take trades unless you are at an exact Battle Plan location and are prepared to trade with reduced size. Large candles mean larger stop risk, less predictable entries, and a much smaller margin for error.

What does "laddering" mean in futures trading?

A: Laddering is a position entry technique where you add contracts at sequential price levels rather than entering all at once. In the MES micro futures trade plan, laddering typically means entering at a Battle Plan level and adding contracts as price moves in your favor and reclaims additional mapped levels. It allows you to build a larger position during a confirmed move while keeping initial risk small. The reverse — "ladder back" — refers to re-entering at levels you already identified on the map as price reclaims them on a reversal.

What is a lotto runner?

A: A lotto runner is a speculative, low-probability extended portion of a trade that is held well past the normal profit target. After peeling off contracts at the primary target (for example, taking 10 and 10 points), a trader might leave one contract running as a "lotto" in hopes that the move extends significantly further. The expectation is that it will probably not work — but when it does, the payoff is outsized. It is always a small, defined portion of the position, not the primary trade.

Can I still trade a Battle Plan level that did not follow through on the first touch?

A: Yes. A Battle Plan level that does not follow through initially does not disappear. As George showed in yesterday's session, when BP3 and BP4 did not immediately follow through, they still offered re-entry opportunities as price reclaimed those levels on the reversal. If you missed the first touch, wait — watch for price to come back and reclaim the level, and treat that reclaim as a new valid entry in the direction of the move.

How long should I stay in a winning futures trade?

A: As long as the system and your rules allow. The goal is to hold winning trades as long as possible and exit losing trades as quickly as possible. If you find yourself cutting winners short while letting losers run, that ratio is the primary problem to fix. You do not need to find a new trade when you are already in a winning one — your job is to manage and hold the position you have.

What is the Core Strategy Stand Down rule?

A: Stand Down is a Core Strategy directive to not take trades in certain market conditions. It is triggered when the risk environment is elevated — for example, during large 15-point candle sessions, around major news events, or when market structure does not provide clear, clean trade locations. Standing Down is not a failure — it is a disciplined decision to protect your account on difficult days so you are fully positioned to trade on favorable ones.

What is Battle Plan Buddy?

A: Battle Plan Buddy is a small floating application available to Battle Plan members on Mac, PC, and Linux. It sits on your desktop and displays the Battle Plan notes for each numbered level. When you click a Battle Plan number (for example, BP4), it opens and shows you the full notes for that level — including context, conditions, and any special instructions George added for the session. It keeps the Battle Plan visible and accessible without needing to switch windows while trading.

What is the Strong Levels indicator?

A: Strong Levels is a chart indicator available to Battle Plan members that automatically plots George's most important levels for the week onto your chart. Each Sunday, George identifies the levels he believes will be most significant for the coming week, and the indicator pulls those levels from his chart and displays them on yours. You can toggle it on and off as needed. It keeps your chart aligned with the Battle Plan without requiring manual input of each level.

📚 RESOURCES FOR FUTURES TRADERS

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