What Lazy Trader does
Use this page when the main question is not “which button do I press”, but “what role does Lazy Trader play in the workflow at all”.
A reversal model based on a genuine structural turn where the previous and current swing directions differ.
Section video
Classic Structure Reversal is the regime-change member of the family. It is built for moments when the market stops extending the old direction and starts building a new structural direction instead.
The active structural leg still defines entry and stop placement, but the model only becomes valid when the previous swing direction and the current swing direction are different. That requirement keeps the model from degenerating into a continuation setup with more aggressive wording.
In trading terms, it is closer to a structural version of a double top or double bottom: first the old sequence breaks, then a new swing forms, then the pullback entry is taken inside the new direction.
What changes in the reversal logic
Mandatory condition
A reversal setup is valid only when the direction of the previous swing element differs from the direction of the current one.

Use this page when the main question is not “which button do I press”, but “what role does Lazy Trader play in the workflow at all”.
PLAN is the root canvas: it is where risk, entry/stop/take, and the links to every other menu become one executable scenario.
END AT defines when the plan stops looking for new positions, which is different from instantly flattening every already-open trade.
TIME is where session logic lives: windows, overnights, weekday permissions, daily close, Friday close, and broker-specific timing constraints.
This section explains the combined logic of Direction plus Start After, which is where many users actually shape the market bias of the plan.
Direction defines whether the plan is fixed long-only, fixed short-only, or dynamically biased through box, MA, or swing logic.
Start After does not pick the side of the trade; it defines what must happen before the plan is allowed to begin evaluating entries at all.
Models are the executable entry modules inside the plan, and the menu is built to let many different model types coexist under one scenario.
Status canvas merges Direction, Start After, End At, Time, and Models into one live state map, so you can see what is aligned, what is still pending, and why the plan is running or waiting.
Position Manager gives each open trade its own chart-level button and lets you adjust takes, breakeven, stop-loss, and level sizing without leaving the Lazy Trader workflow.
Base config is the shared risk and management layer that sits under each model and keeps model-specific logic from drifting into risk chaos.
Box-Fractal uses a confirmed fractal range as the structural base for entry and stop placement rather than entering at the first raw extremum.
Larry-Williams works with range extremes and supports both direct breakout continuation and return-entry logic after a raid back into the range.
Classic Structure is the shared logic layer for three related pages: trend continuation, primary liquidity sweep, and reversal structure.
Classic Trend participates on a pullback inside the active structure without requiring the structure direction itself to flip.
This variation opens on the first important structural violation and reads it as a sweep rather than as a full structural reversal.
The MA model does more than “touch the fast average”: it also validates the nearest eligible fractal to the left before opening.
BPR is the imbalance-compression model: it works with the overlap between opposite inefficiencies and lets you choose how deep into that balance zone entry should happen.
Optimization is where the guide stops being descriptive and becomes operational: save several plan configs, iterate them in the tester, and read the journal by model contribution.