ES MES AM Briefing

MES MICROS TRADE PLAN

The Risk of a Liquidation Break Is High — And Your Trade Plan Has the Answer

Posted: Monday June 1, 2026

☀️ AM BRIEFING

Monday's AM Briefing came down to one theme: know when to step back. With new all-time highs stacking up and a chaotic overnight session full of wicks and near-15-point candles, George flagged the risk of a liquidation break as very high heading into a news-heavy week. Non-Farm Payroll hits Friday and JOLTS is tomorrow — your ES futures daily trade setups this week need to account for that. The best MES micro futures trade plan entries are sitting below current price, and getting greedy for lower is the right call.

Trading Psychology: Suffer Until You Change

George opened with a tip from Jesuit priest Anthony De Mello — and it hit hard. "If you're suffering and not willing to do anything about it, you need to suffer more. Suffer until you get sick of it." That's not cruelty. That's how most real trading breakthroughs happen.

  • Pain is the catalyst: Every real change in your trading life — cutting the bad trade, fixing position size, respecting the rules — probably came after a painful enough loss to force the issue.
  • The trap of short-term memory: Without journaling, you won't even be aware of the patterns you keep repeating. The bad trade you keep taking, the setup you keep forcing… you already know what needs to change.
  • Journaling makes you honest: If you're not tracking your trades in writing, you're running on selective memory. Journal every session so the pattern becomes undeniable — and the pain lands where it needs to.
You already know what needs to change… especially if you've been journaling. If you haven't been journaling, you may not even be aware of it.

Trader Lesson 1

Pain is information. If you keep repeating the same losing behavior, you haven't suffered enough from it yet — or you haven't written it down. Journal every trade so the pattern becomes impossible to ignore.

Liquidation Break Risk — The 15-Point Candle Warning

The overnight session looked dangerous. Wicks everywhere. Two candles within a point of having 15 points to the south. George was direct: the risk of a liquidation break is high right now — and when it comes, it won't care about your lines.

  • What a liquidation break looks like: Price just rips down — 15-point candles south, level after level falling. It can be triggered by news, profit-taking, forced selling — or nothing obvious at all. When it starts, you can't reason it out. You just get out of the way.
  • The 15-Point Candle Rule: When you see a 15-point candle to the south, that's the warning shot. The first one might not mean much. Two in quick succession? That's a pattern. Stand back and look for your Battle Plan levels below — don't try to pick the bottom.
  • Knife-catching is the trap: When price starts knifing and people start asking "what's the news?" — that's a Stand Down scenario. The temptation to catch the bottom is real… resist it. The market doesn't owe you a bounce at your level.
  • Where to look instead: When we start knifing, we tend to knife through five to seven Strong Levels. Get greedy. Look further down. The Battle Plan levels below are the targets — let price come to you.
"Level schmel. It don't give a crap that you drew a line here." — When a liquidation break is underway, your chart lines are irrelevant until the flush is done.

Trader Lesson 2

When 15-point candles start stacking to the south, do not knife-catch. Stand back, let the flush run, and look for your Battle Plan entries at the levels mapped below — not wherever the current candle stops.

Week Ahead: Economic Calendar

It's a news-heavy week. Three significant events in five days — each one capable of moving ES futures key levels hard and fast. Whatever your trade plan says about Thursday and Friday, that's your answer. Don't freelance it.

Date Event Significance
Monday, June 1 PMI (9:00 AM CT) Manufacturing sentiment — early-week volatility trigger
Tuesday, June 2 JOLTS Job openings — Fed watches this closely for labor market signals
Friday, June 6 Non-Farm Payroll Monthly jobs report — highest-impact economic release of the week

Trader Lesson 3

Before a high-impact news release like Non-Farm Payroll, your trade plan should already answer the question: do I trade it or stand aside? If you don't have a rule for Thursday and Friday… now is the time to write one.

Battle Plan Trade Review — Going the Distance

Wednesday night's Battle Plan mapped a setup that — if held overnight — could have returned over 100 points. That's what George calls "going the distance." It doesn't happen every session… but at least once a week, a Battle Plan trade sets up for that kind of run.

  • What "going the distance" means: 100 points on the MES is a significant move. It rarely happens within a single RTH session. You need a good overnight setup and a strong directional push to get there.
  • The overnight advantage: Holding a Battle Plan entry overnight — when the setup warrants it — is where multi-hundred-dollar runners are born. This week's trade was a prime example.
  • Expected range on NFP week: George flagged the expected range at roughly 90 points heading into Non-Farm Payroll Friday… and noted that seems a little light given the event risk. Plan accordingly.
  • Battle Plan 1 this session: BP1 was mapped at a Strong Level near the overnight low. Price bounced cleanly off it. George had called it a "micro pullback" entry — but the open pushed down only slightly before launching to all-time highs. No pullback, no clean entry. That's the trade.

Trader Lesson 4

Not every mapped entry triggers cleanly. When the setup you planned doesn't give you the pullback you need, that's not a failure — that's the market telling you to wait. The next setup is always coming.

Single Stock Futures — Worth Watching

George flagged a new product on his radar: single stock futures. If you've ever watched a setup in an individual stock and thought "I should have participated in that" — this might be the vehicle that finally makes sense for futures traders.

  • What they are: Single stock futures let you trade futures contracts on individual company stocks — getting the leverage and margin structure of futures on names you already follow.
  • Why George is watching: Using Core Strategy on a high time frame, he's called turnaround trades in individual names for years — but never had the right instrument to trade them with. Not shares, not options. Single stock futures might change that.
  • Not a recommendation — a heads up: George isn't committing to trading them yet. He's bringing it to the community's attention. If you've been following individual names with a futures mindset, it's worth looking into.

"If you're suffering and not willing to do anything about it, you need to suffer more. Suffer until you get sick of it."

❓ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

COMMON QUESTIONS FOR ES FUTURES TRADERS

What is a liquidation break in ES futures?

A: A liquidation break is a sharp, fast selloff driven by forced selling — stop-losses cascading, margin calls hitting, and traders exiting positions all at once. It can be triggered by news, profit-taking, or seemingly nothing at all. The key characteristic is that it doesn't respect your key levels. Price rips through Strong Levels, support, VWAP — all of it. When a liquidation break is underway, the right move is to stand back and wait for it to flush out completely before looking for entries.

What is the 15-Point Candle Rule?

A: The 15-Point Candle Rule is a warning signal George uses in the MES micro futures trade plan. When a candle closes 15 or more points in one direction — especially to the downside — it's a sign of unusual momentum and elevated risk. One 15-point candle is a warning. Two in quick succession is a serious red flag. When these candles appear, the correct response is to step aside, not step in. Look for your Battle Plan levels further below and wait for the volatility to exhaust itself.

What does "knife-catching" mean in futures trading, and why is it dangerous?

A: Knife-catching is trying to buy a falling market before it stops falling — attempting to pick the exact bottom of a sharp selloff. In ES futures trading, this typically means buying into 15-point candles south because "it has to bounce here." The problem is it doesn't have to. During a liquidation break, price doesn't respect levels — and knife-catchers get stopped out repeatedly as each bounce fails. Resist the urge. Let price find its level, then look for your mapped Battle Plan entry below.

What is a Stand Down scenario in Battle Plan trading?

A: Stand Down is a command George uses when market conditions are dangerous enough that the correct trade is no trade. It happens when price is knifing, volatility is extreme, or the news environment makes normal setups unreliable. Stand Down doesn't mean the market is broken — it means the conditions don't match the setups in your plan. Discipline here protects your capital for the next clean setup.

Why does George map Battle Plan trades below current price when volatility is high?

A: When the market is extended to the upside and showing instability — wicks, 15-point candles, all-time highs stacking — the highest-probability setups often live below current price. If a liquidation break occurs, price will knife down through multiple Strong Levels quickly. By mapping entries further below, you're positioned to catch the move at a structure-based level where buyers are likely to step in, rather than trading the volatile chop at the top.

How does journaling improve your futures trading performance?

A: Traders have short memories — we remember our winners and forget patterns in our losers. A trading journal creates an objective record that makes your habits undeniable. If you keep taking the same bad setup, forcing the same entries, or sizing too large in the same conditions, a journal will show you the pattern within weeks. Without it, you can go months repeating the same mistake and rationalizing each loss as a one-off. Journal every trade: entry, exit, reason, emotion, result.

What is Non-Farm Payroll and how does it affect ES futures?

A: Non-Farm Payroll (NFP) is a monthly economic report released the first Friday of each month showing how many jobs were added or lost in the U.S. economy. It's one of the highest-impact releases in all of futures trading — capable of moving ES futures 30, 50, or even 100+ points within minutes of the release. Many traders either stand aside entirely on NFP Friday or trade it with very tight rules. Your trade plan should have a specific protocol for news-release days.

What does "going the distance" mean in a Battle Plan trade?

A: "Going the distance" is George's phrase for a Battle Plan trade that runs 100 or more points. Most trades resolve within Regular Trading Hours with a fraction of that. But at least once a week, a Battle Plan setup maps an entry that — if held through the overnight session and into the next RTH open — has the potential for a multi-hundred-dollar runner. These trades require patience, a solid entry, and a clear plan for managing the overnight hold.

📚 RESOURCES FOR FUTURES TRADERS

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