
Market Lab — The Inhabitant of the Laboratory
Emily discovers a mysterious hamster in the lab. Bitcoin overheated, RATS explodes +92.49%. Trading system works flawlessly—until a strange message appears.

🔬 Market Lab — Finding Signals in the Noise
Rate cuts crashed the market? Emily explains why volatility is just noise and how to catch the signal with the Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO).

Market Lab — In the Moment
Staying calm in turbulent times: our approach.
Algo trading and crypto lab. Documenting real trades, bots and risk. No guarantees, no guru talk.

Market Lab — The Inhabitant of the Laboratory
Emily discovers a mysterious hamster in the lab. Bitcoin overheated, RATS explodes +92.49%. Trading system works flawlessly—until a strange message appears.

🔬 Market Lab — Finding Signals in the Noise
Rate cuts crashed the market? Emily explains why volatility is just noise and how to catch the signal with the Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO).

Market Lab — In the Moment
Staying calm in turbulent times: our approach.
Algo trading and crypto lab. Documenting real trades, bots and risk. No guarantees, no guru talk.

Subscribe to Hampfree | Market Lab

Subscribe to Hampfree | Market Lab
Share Dialog
Share Dialog


<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
This morning, Emily stood in front of a staircase leading somewhere into the bowels of the laboratory. Below, in the eerie semi-darkness, something massive was visible, covered with a dusty tarp. Newbie was squeaking curiously, sitting on her shoulder.
— What's in there? — she muttered, taking the first step onto the stairs leading down.
The iron steps rang under her boots. The air was getting colder. Old labels decorated the walls, along with numbers and diagrams. There was a low rumble somewhere deeper. As if the machine was breathing slowly.
Newbie jumped from her shoulder onto the railing and descended faster, becoming a small dark figure in the darkness.
At the bottom of the stairs stood a huge structure made of metal, glass, and wires. The control panel was pitted with rust, but the dials were still glowing.
Emily groped for the switches that turned on the lights. "Clack!" — and in front of her appeared a switchboard with a hundred switches. Cooling channels leading into the unknown. And cables everywhere. Black, red, yellow, intertwined in a complex web.
There was a sign on the board: "ORACLE 1.1".
Emily opened the panel. On the screen, the dials began to glow, displaying the internal mechanics:
Bollinger Bands — dynamic price range; breaking through boundaries signals a revaluation of the asset
ATR% — an indicator of volatility; measures the average range of price changes over a period
ROC — momentum indicator; shows the rate of price change and trend strength
Williams %R — oscillator; determines the overbought and oversold zones of the asset
It was a huge mechanical golem, designed for one thing: to catch the moments when the market loses its balance.
Emily found the start button. She took a deep breath. And she turned it on.
GRRRRRRR... CLICK... CLICK... GRRRRRRR...
The system came alive. The dials began to spin. The cables glowed. The control panel made rhythmic clicks — like the beating of a huge heart.
Newbie jumped onto the panel and the screen blinked:
ORACLE READY
COORDINATES LOCKED
AWAITING DEPLOYMENT
But Emily saw something else. Next to the control panel, under a layer of dust and forgotten folders, lay a large but battered reference book. The cover was almost falling apart, the pages were yellowed, but the headline was clear:
"Fundamentals of Portfolio Diversification and Architecture"
Inside were handwritten notes, diagrams, and tables. The structure was battered, but... it was there. Logical and proven.
— Hmm, — Emily muttered, flipping to the first page. — An introductory structure! It can be supplemented and restored!
She took the reference book out of the dungeon, turned on the light in the laboratory, and began to read.
Newbie jumped on the book and let out a pleased squeak.
Part 2: How to Set Up the System
⚠️ IMPORTANT: This material is for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading involves high risk. Loss of capital is possible.
Copy trading accounts:
Referral links:
Join our Telegram:
Hampfree | Market Lab (Global)
#FuturesTrading #MarketLab #Emily
This morning, Emily stood in front of a staircase leading somewhere into the bowels of the laboratory. Below, in the eerie semi-darkness, something massive was visible, covered with a dusty tarp. Newbie was squeaking curiously, sitting on her shoulder.
— What's in there? — she muttered, taking the first step onto the stairs leading down.
The iron steps rang under her boots. The air was getting colder. Old labels decorated the walls, along with numbers and diagrams. There was a low rumble somewhere deeper. As if the machine was breathing slowly.
Newbie jumped from her shoulder onto the railing and descended faster, becoming a small dark figure in the darkness.
At the bottom of the stairs stood a huge structure made of metal, glass, and wires. The control panel was pitted with rust, but the dials were still glowing.
Emily groped for the switches that turned on the lights. "Clack!" — and in front of her appeared a switchboard with a hundred switches. Cooling channels leading into the unknown. And cables everywhere. Black, red, yellow, intertwined in a complex web.
There was a sign on the board: "ORACLE 1.1".
Emily opened the panel. On the screen, the dials began to glow, displaying the internal mechanics:
Bollinger Bands — dynamic price range; breaking through boundaries signals a revaluation of the asset
ATR% — an indicator of volatility; measures the average range of price changes over a period
ROC — momentum indicator; shows the rate of price change and trend strength
Williams %R — oscillator; determines the overbought and oversold zones of the asset
It was a huge mechanical golem, designed for one thing: to catch the moments when the market loses its balance.
Emily found the start button. She took a deep breath. And she turned it on.
GRRRRRRR... CLICK... CLICK... GRRRRRRR...
The system came alive. The dials began to spin. The cables glowed. The control panel made rhythmic clicks — like the beating of a huge heart.
Newbie jumped onto the panel and the screen blinked:
ORACLE READY
COORDINATES LOCKED
AWAITING DEPLOYMENT
But Emily saw something else. Next to the control panel, under a layer of dust and forgotten folders, lay a large but battered reference book. The cover was almost falling apart, the pages were yellowed, but the headline was clear:
"Fundamentals of Portfolio Diversification and Architecture"
Inside were handwritten notes, diagrams, and tables. The structure was battered, but... it was there. Logical and proven.
— Hmm, — Emily muttered, flipping to the first page. — An introductory structure! It can be supplemented and restored!
She took the reference book out of the dungeon, turned on the light in the laboratory, and began to read.
Newbie jumped on the book and let out a pleased squeak.
Part 2: How to Set Up the System
⚠️ IMPORTANT: This material is for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading involves high risk. Loss of capital is possible.
Copy trading accounts:
Referral links:
Join our Telegram:
Hampfree | Market Lab (Global)
#FuturesTrading #MarketLab #Emily
No activity yet