Academy / Level 1
Level 1 — Foundations / Trading Academy

Build a rational basis before any search for performance

This level constitutes the methodological base of the course. The objective is not to push the user to “take trades”, but to teach them to think properly: scenario, invalidation, risk, exit logic and reading discipline.

This version of level 1 adopts a logic closer to a premium training platform: visual progression, collapsible sections, educational timeline, sticky navigation and step-by-step validation.

Basic plan Level 1 included in all plans
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Expected result

At the end of level 1, the student must be able to define a trade, read a simple structure, think in scenarios and limit their risk.

Targeted skills

  • Understand the language of trading.
  • Read a simple structure.
  • Formulate a market hypothesis.
  • Protect capital through risk.
  • Avoid destructive mistakes.
Learning Hub

Level 1 Dashboard — Foundations Score

This area replaces “passive video” logic with platform logic: you see your progress, the skills to consolidate, the level timeline, and the modules to validate in order.

Modules 10
Final quiz 1
Access Included
Level Foundation

Visual score

0% Progress
Mental structure before execution
Understanding risk before return
Reading the price before sophistication

Progress timeline

1
● Foundations

Understand what trading really is and get away from the myth of prediction.

2
● In progress

Structuring a hypothesis, defining the risk, reading an area and understanding invalidation.

3
● Validation

Pass the final quiz and transform understanding into a stable operational basis.

Conceptual mastery

Ability to correctly name trading mechanisms.

Capital protection

Understand why financial survival precedes performance.

Structure reading

Observe the price simply before any complexity.

Decision-making discipline

Moving from vague intuition to verifiable logic.

Actual progress

0/10 modules validated • 0% completed

Express validation

Quick Check — Initial market reading

Start with a mini test to instill good reflexes. A serious trader validates his understanding before researching the action.

1. A disciplined trader enters a position:

2. A support must be seen as:

3. The top priority of a serious beginner is:

Market visualization

Educational Chart — BTC/USD

This graph serves as real reading support. At this level, the objective is not to interpret everything, but to learn to distinguish impulse, correction, visible area and general direction.

Module 01 Foundation score

Define trading rigorously

Get away from the myth of prediction and enter into probabilistic logic.

From the myth of prediction to probabilistic logic

Trading is often presented as the art of guessing whether an asset will go up or down. This representation is insufficient. More strictly, it is a decision-making activity under uncertainty, in which the operator undertakes a limited risk in the face of a potential return deemed acceptable.

The heart of the profession is not certainty, but the management of asymmetry. A scenario can be coherent without being certain. A good decision can sometimes produce a loss, while a bad decision can sometimes produce an accidental gain.

The beginner often confuses decision quality and immediate result. However, serious progress requires a stronger methodological framework than the simple search for quick gains.

Definition

Trading is a tactical risk allocation activity aimed at exploiting price variations over a given horizon, according to a framework of execution, invalidation and capital management.

Concrete example

A trader doesn’t buy Bitcoin just because he “thinks it’s going to go up.” He buys because he has identified a context, an entry zone, an invalidation and an exit objective compatible with his risk.

Common error

Confusing personal conviction with operational advantage. A strong market opinion is never a substitute for a plan.

To remember

The serious trader does not seek to always be right. He seeks to lose little when he is wrong and to properly exploit favorable contexts.

Professional framework

Mental questionnaire before any decision

  • What do I actually observe, not what I hope for?
  • What is the dominant scenario?
  • Where does my idea become wrong?
  • Is my risk clearly defined?
  • Is my decision based on a plan or on impulse?
Next module
Module 02

Mapping financial markets

Distinguish between environments to avoid simplistic analogies.

Differentiate environments to avoid simplistic analogies

Not all markets behave the same way. Each universe has its own rhythms, its liquidity structure, its dominant times and its sensitivity to sentiment or macroeconomics.

Forex is characterized by high liquidity on major pairs and frequent reactions to macro announcements. The crypto market exhibits greater volatility, increased sensitivity to sentiment, and sometimes more impulsive movements.

Indices and commodities often respond to broader logics: monetary policy, risk appetite, inflation, geopolitical stress.

Case study

A breakout on Bitcoin can be more brutal and more emotional than a breakout on a major Forex pair. Interpreting these two events with the same psychological framework exposes you to execution errors.

To remember

Learning trading also means learning to respect the specific personality of each market.

Crypto

  • High volatility.
  • Very influential feeling.
  • Accelerations sometimes brutal.
  • Common emotional traps.

Forex / Gold / Indices

  • More readable macro reactions.
  • Liquidity often more stable.
  • Sometimes cleaner structure.
  • Very important times and sessions.
Reading table
Walk
Volatility
Beginner reading
Bitcoin/Crypto
High
Emotional caution
Major Forex
Average
More structured reading
Gold
Medium to strong
Very sensitive to macro context
Indices
Variable
Pay attention to timetables and news
Next module
Module 03

Buy, Sell and market hypothesis

To enter into a position is to formulate a falsifiable hypothesis.

To enter into a position is to formulate a falsifiable hypothesis

A buying position assumes that we anticipate an increase. A sell position, a decline. But each position must above all be understood as a hypothesis: if the market maintains this behavior, the scenario remains valid; if it breaks a key level, the hypothesis becomes false.

This implies that a serious position already contains within itself its own invalidation. Entering without knowing where you are wrong is not a trading decision; it’s raw exposure to chance.

Definition

A trading position is a directional hypothesis with an entry point, an invalidation level and an exit target.

Concrete example

Buying gold in a support zone only makes sense if you know at which level the support ceases to be valid.

Common error

Entering because “the price has already dropped a lot” or “seems too high” without a clear structure.

Real case

Simple example — Purchase on BTC support

  • Context: the price returns to a key area.
  • Hypothesis: A rebound can occur if the zone holds.
  • Invalidation: if the zone breaks clearly, the idea becomes false.
  • Objective: aim for the next logical reaction zone.
  • Conclusion: the input is not a belief, but a testable hypothesis.
Next module
Module 04

Pip, lot, spread and leverage

Understand technical units before handling risk.

Understanding technical units before handling risk

The technical vocabulary of trading is not decorative. It structures the way a trader measures their exposure. The pip represents a unit of variation, the lot the position size, the spread the buy/sell spread, the leverage amplifies the exposure.

Many beginners increase their stake or their leverage to “go faster” without understanding that acceleration also applies to losses.

Attention

Leverage does not improve a fragile method. It simply accelerates the consequences of this fragility.

To remember

Before thinking about yield, we must know how to precisely measure what each price movement represents for real capital.

What you need to know

  • What position size I use.
  • How much I lose if my stop is hit.
  • What impact does the spread have on my entry.
  • What role does leverage play in my actual exposure.

What to avoid

  • Build the batch to compensate for frustration.
  • Using leverage without understanding amplification.
  • Minimize the cumulative effect of small errors.
  • Enter with size inconsistent with capital.

Educational effect of the lever

As leverage increases, a small change can have a disproportionate impact on the account.

Simple exposure/risk reading

Technical understanding should always precede increasing position size.

Next module
Module 05

Stop Loss and Take Profit

The output architecture as the heart of the plan.

The output architecture as the heart of the plan

The Stop Loss materializes the invalidation of the scenario. Take Profit materializes the logic of making a profit. One protects, the other disciplines.

The existence of a stop proves that the trader accepts uncertainty. The existence of a goal proves that he also knows how to limit his greed.

Concrete example

On EUR/USD, a purchase taken in a technical zone without a precise invalidation level transforms a coherent idea into a disorderly exposure.

Real Case — BTC

Bitcoin is arriving at a visible support zone. The trader observes a rejection, then a recovery above a confirmation candle. The entry only becomes relevant if the stop is placed below the zone and the objective is at consistent resistance.

To remember

A trade without an exit structure is not a plan. It's a vulnerability.

Simple rule

The return/risk ratio

  • Risk = distance between entry and stop.
  • Potential yield = distance between entry and goal.
  • A scenario that is too low in relation to the risk must be avoided.
  • The ratio does not replace analysis, but it disciplines selection.
Comparison
Situation
Good practice
Bad practice
Entry
Zone + signal
Emotional impulse
Stop
Logical invalidation
Arbitrary or absent stop
Objective
Planned exit
Unstructured hope
Next module
Module 06

Risk management: central principle of the profession

Financial survival precedes any performance ambition.

Financial survival precedes any performance ambition

Risk management is the central pillar of trading. An account does not disappear because a single trade is bad, but because several large errors, leverage or discipline are tolerated over time.

The initial objective is not to extract as much as possible from the market, but to remain stable enough to learn without falling apart.

Definition

Risk management is the set of rules that limit the impact of an error on capital, ensure operational continuity and stabilize behavior.

Common error

Increasing Position Size After a Frustration Loss or desire to “recover”.

To remember

A sustainable trader is not one who wins quickly, but one who remains solvent long enough to become proficient.

Basic rules

Minimum recommended discipline

  • Maximum risk per trade: limited and defined in advance.
  • No clearly thought-out, no-stop trade.
  • No emotional increase in size.
  • No revenge after a loss.
  • Absolute priority to the survival of capital.

Discipline vs destruction of capital

Disciplined management often produces slower progress, but much more stable.

Next module
Module 07

Basic graphic reading

Observe price behavior before interpreting.

Observe price behavior before interpreting

Reading a graph is not about reciting shapes. It is about observing how the price moves, slows down, accelerates, rejects or hesitates.

The first skill is not to see everything, but to simplify correctly: does the price go up, does it fall, does it consolidate? Does it react on an obvious area?

Case study

A series of strong bullish candles with small corrections does not just mean “it goes up”. It also indicates that sellers regain little ground at each break.

Checklist reading

Simple questions in front of a graph

  • Is the price moving upwards, downwards or sideways?
  • Are the impulses strong or weak?
  • Are the corrections deep or moderate?
  • Does the price react to a visible area?
  • Does current behavior confirm or weaken the scenario?
Next module
Module 08

Supports and resistances

Reaction zones as decision spaces.

Reaction zones as decision spaces

Supports and resistances should not be treated as absolute lines, but as potential decision areas. Their usefulness comes from the fact that they focus the attention of many operators.

The beginner's mistake is believing that a level “must” work. The more rigorous trader considers, on the contrary, that a level is a place where the market can reveal useful information.

To remember

Support or resistance does not provide certainty. It gives context to watch out for.

Concrete example

Resistance worked several times can end up giving way, but it can also produce a false start. It is not the level alone that counts, but the way the price behaves there.

Immature reading

  • The level must necessarily hold.
  • The break is necessarily true.
  • The reaction is interpreted too quickly.

More mature reading

  • The level is an observation area.
  • Price behavior confirms or invalidates.
  • Patience takes precedence over haste.
Next module
Module 09

Beginner's Structural Mistakes

Understanding failure as a structural phenomenon.

Overtrading

Constantly looking for action leads to taking trades without a clear advantage.

Refusal of invalidation

Moving the Stop Loss or hoping without a plan amounts to denying the very principle of the scenario.

Emotional leverage

Increasing exposure to compensate for impatience or frustration destroys stability.

Understanding failure as a structural phenomenon

Beginner's losses do not come only from a lack of technique. They also come from a bad relationship with time, with the ego, with frustration and the desire for immediate results.

Many destructive errors are behavioral before being technical. The user must learn to recognize bad setups but also bad mental states.

To remember

The biggest mistakes aren't technical. They are often behavioral.

Beginner

  • Wants to act often.
  • Seeking an impossible certainty.
  • Refuse to be wrong.
  • Confusing activity and competence.

More mature trader

  • Expects a more coherent structure.
  • Accept uncertainty.
  • Limit the risk.
  • Prioritize quality over frequency.
Self-diagnosis

Questions to ask yourself after a loss

  • Did I stick to my initial plan?
  • Did I move my stop sign for no reason?
  • Did I take this trade out of boredom, FOMO or frustration?
  • Was my position size rational?
  • Have I confused the desire for action and the quality of the setup?
Next module
Unit 10

Synthesis and intellectual validation of level 1

Transform understanding into a stable operational basis.

What level 1 must transform

Level 1 is not intended to make the user a successful trader immediately. It first corrects the way of thinking about the market: hypothesis, invalidation, exposure, risk, reaction zone, exit logic, discipline.

This base is not spectacular, but it is essential. Without it, advanced levels would produce only superficial sophistication.

Skills acquired

  • Define trading with rigorous vocabulary.
  • Distinguish between markets, positions, risk and exposure.
  • Understand the role of Stop Loss and Take Profit.
  • Read a simple graphic structure.
  • Identify the most destructive errors.

Questions for reflection

  • Do I have a scenario or just an opinion?
  • Do I know where my idea becomes wrong?
  • Does my position size respect my capital?
  • Did I take this trade out of logic or impulse?
  • Have I confused activity and competence?
Final checklist

Checklist before any beginner trade

  • Have I identified a clear area?
  • Have I understood in which direction the market seems to be moving?
  • Does my scenario have a specific invalidation?
  • Is my risk bearable for my capital?
  • Is my input rational or emotional?
  • Is my exit goal logical?
Go to the final quiz
Learning framework

Skills targeted at the end of level 1

This level should allow the user to understand the basic language of trading, to read a simple structure, to reason in terms of scenario and invalidation, and to integrate the primacy of risk management.

Conceptual understanding

Name the mechanisms correctly before pretending to use them.

Capital protection

Accept that financial survival always precedes the search for returns.

Intellectual discipline

Moving from fuzzy intuition to structured and verifiable reasoning.

Evolution of disciplined capital

This educational graphic shows that sustainable growth relies less on euphoria only on regularity, the repetition of good decisions and the limitation of losses.

Impact of excessive risk

Two trajectories can start from the same initial capital. The one who uses a risk poorly controlled becomes much more unstable and vulnerable.

Fundamental framework

The minimum structure of a serious trade

From level 1, the user must understand that a trade cannot be reduced to a simple “I think it will go up”. Any serious decision must be based on a minimal structure.

The 5 basic elements

  • The general market context.
  • The area of ​​interest or reaction.
  • The price signal or behavior.
  • The level of invalidation.
  • The objective or output logic.

What this avoids

  • Enter without a specific plan.
  • Moving the stop without logic.
  • Confusing intuition and method.
  • Take an unmeasured risk.
  • Coming out emotionally.
Assessment

Level 1 validation

1. Trading must be understood above all as:

2. Stop Loss is mainly used to:

3. A common beginner structural error is:

4. A serious position must always include:

5. Risk management serves above all to: