Kal Kya Trade Karun? | Yeh Poochna Chhodo, Ye Karo
Summary
Most traders treat the opening range breakout as a buy or sell signal on its own, and that is exactly why it fails them. This video reframes ORB as an information and timing tool rather than a standalone strategy, and walks through the full professional workflow that surrounds it, from the previous market close to the next morning's entry. The preparation starts after 3:30, not at 9:15: building a stock-in-play watchlist using an eight-point filter that looks at F&O availability, a meaningful percentage move, a volume spike, daily ATR, open-interest buildup, price range, relative strength, and liquidity. The next layer is market regime, reading Gift Nifty and overnight sentiment to judge whether tomorrow is more likely a trend day or a range day. From there the trader plans for several scenarios instead of predicting one direction, and decides where the idea is wrong before sizing anything. The sequence matters: invalidation first, then risk, then quantity, with targets drawn from supply and demand zones rather than arbitrary percentages. Only at the end does ORB act as a final confirmation filter. The takeaway is that the same chart, the same indicators, and the same opening range can produce completely different results depending on the preparation and context a trader brings to them. A disciplined process, not the signal itself, is what creates the edge.
This summary is for educational purposes only and is not financial, investment, or trading advice. Markets carry risk; do your own research and consult a qualified professional before making decisions.