The holy grail described in the PDF is finding a "Square within a Square."
At its heart, the Square the Range system operates on three foundational ideas:
You cannot trade this system with a standard 2% risk model. Because ranges are tight, you must use the Squared Stop method.
The Formula:
Risk per trade = (Height of the square / 2) * (Position size)
The Rule: Never risk more than 1% of your total account capital on a single square trade. Example: A $10,000 account means $100 risk per trade. If the square is 10 pips tall, your stop is 5 pips. Therefore, you must size your position so that a 5 pip loss equals $100.
The PDF includes a full table of pre-calculated position sizes for 12 major currency pairs, Gold, and Index futures.
If you were to download a PDF guide on this system, it would likely cover three primary pillars:
Unlike typical "support/resistance" flipping, the Square the Range system treats the area inside the box as a closed energy field. You do not trade the direction; you trade the structure.
The PDF divides the square into three horizontal zones:
The holy grail described in the PDF is finding a "Square within a Square."
At its heart, the Square the Range system operates on three foundational ideas:
You cannot trade this system with a standard 2% risk model. Because ranges are tight, you must use the Squared Stop method.
The Formula:
Risk per trade = (Height of the square / 2) * (Position size)
The Rule: Never risk more than 1% of your total account capital on a single square trade. Example: A $10,000 account means $100 risk per trade. If the square is 10 pips tall, your stop is 5 pips. Therefore, you must size your position so that a 5 pip loss equals $100.
The PDF includes a full table of pre-calculated position sizes for 12 major currency pairs, Gold, and Index futures.
If you were to download a PDF guide on this system, it would likely cover three primary pillars:
Unlike typical "support/resistance" flipping, the Square the Range system treats the area inside the box as a closed energy field. You do not trade the direction; you trade the structure.
The PDF divides the square into three horizontal zones: