Agorion Insights
: The Clarity Series :
Structured Day Trading Education
Agorion Insights is the public extension of our structured learning path. Each article is part of The Clarity Series, designed to break down day trading concepts clearly and progressively for women building long-term skill.
Start Your Trading Education
With a Structured Path
Not sure where to begin? Choose a learning path designed to guide you step-by-step, without overwhelm.
Choose where to begin:
How to Read Candlesticks Step-by-step
Learn how to read candlesticks step-by-step so you can understand price movement and market behavior.
Margin vs Leverage: What’s the Difference?
Confused about margin and leverage? Learn the difference and how they impact your trades as a beginner.
How to Use EMA in Trading (Beginner Guide)
Learn how to use EMA to understand trend direction and market flow without relying on complex indicators.
How to Set Stop Loss and Take Profit
Understand how to set stop loss and take profit levels to manage risk and build long-term consistency.
How to Plan a Trade Before Entering
Most beginners enter trades without a plan. Learn how to structure your trades before execution to improve consistency.
How to Use the Long/Short Tool Step-by-Step
Learn how to use the long/short tool to plan trades, manage risk, and build consistency before entering the market.
How Trading Foundations Work Together: Building a Simple, Structured Approach
A recap of The Agorion Foundations series showing how leverage, charts, trend, risk, and market mechanics work together.
What Is Margin in Trading? A Beginners Guide
Learn what margin means in trading, how it works with leverage, and why understanding margin requirements matters for risk control.
What Is Risk Management In Trading? Fundamentals for Beginners
Learn the fundamentals of risk management and why protecting your trading capitol is the most important skill for long term success.
Understanding Market Hours for beginner Traders
Learn how market hours affect trading activity and why different times of day create different levels of volatility.