GreenSniperX — Futures & Forex Crash Course
The complete beginner's guide to trading futures and forex — two of the most liquid, most leveraged markets in the world.
This interactive course covers everything from the ground up: how contracts and currency pairs work, how to set up a platform and practice account, how to read charts, how sessions and pre-market gaps affect your trades, and how leverage and margin can work for you — or wipe you out. Then it goes deep on real strategies for both markets, with full entry, exit, and position-sizing plans for each one.
What's inside:
- 16 chapters covering both futures (ES, MES, NQ, MNQ, crude oil, gold) and forex (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY and more)
- Leverage & margin explained in plain language — including initial vs. maintenance margin, margin calls, swaps, and rollover
- Trading sessions, pre-market gaps, and why swing traders win (or lose) overnight
- The economic calendar decoded — the exact "clue words" (hawkish, dovish, beat, miss) that tell you which direction the market is likely to move
- Futures strategies: Range Trading, Opening Range Breakout, Economic Data Momentum
- Forex strategies: Trend Pullback, Central Bank Divergence, Currency Strength Rotation
- Full risk management chapter including how much you need to start, position sizing by contract and lot size, and US tax treatment (Section 1256 vs. Section 988)
- Trading psychology — the 6 specific traps that blow up accounts, with the 30-minute rule that cuts most of them
- "Real Life" analogies throughout — every heavy concept explained the way you'd explain it to a friend, no trading jargon required
- 13 chapter quizzes to lock in what you learned
- A trading simulator to test your decisions on real chart scenarios before risking real money
- A full cheat sheet with tick values, pip values, pre-trade checklist, clue word reference, and a 30-term glossary
Instant digital download. Open in any browser. No app required.
This course is educational. Trading futures and forex involves significant risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results.