USDZAR — Short at Supply Rejection [Quantum Algo]USD/ZAROANDA:USDZARQuantum-AlgoRead the chart, Q — USDZAR 2h, forex. Sell fired at overhead supply around 16.45 after the range bounce failed. Levels eyeballed off the zone and the target box; swap in your exact marks if you've got them. Title: USDZAR — Short at Supply Rejection Context: USDZAR has been rotating in a wide 16.15–16.66 range for weeks. Price rallied off the 16.35 lows, pushed back up into an overhead supply block near 16.45, and stalled. The rejection off that zone fired the Sell. This is a range short: fade the top of the balance, target the mid and the range low where liquidity rests. Why this setup works — three confluences: Supply rejection at range resistance. Price tapped the overhead supply block and failed to break through. This zone has capped rallies before, so it's a level with memory — sellers step back in here, and the reaction printed on the tap rather than a guess. Selling from the top of the range. With the market rotating rather than trending, the highest-probability play is fading the extremes. Shorting into resistance keeps risk tight against the range high and gives the trade the full width of the balance to work. Liquidity pooled below. Beneath entry there's an air pocket down to the 16.32 shelf, then the 16.22 zone sitting as resting liquidity at the lower boundary. Defined risk above the zone, asymmetric room down to the target. Trade management: Entry: 16.4500 (rejection off supply) SL: 16.5050 (above the zone) TP1: 16.3200 — take 50% off, move stop to breakeven TP2: 16.2180 — 100% exit at the range-low liquidity R:R: ~4.2:1 to full target Invalidation: A 2h close back above 16.5050. That reclaims the supply zone and puts price back inside the upper half of the range with momentum — thesis dead, no argument, just out. The lesson: In a range, the edge is patience at the edges. The middle is noise; the boundaries are where risk is definable and reward is asymmetric. Wait for price to reach a level that has rejected before, let it prove the rejection, and set your stop where being wrong is cheap. You don't need to predict the breakout — you need to get paid while the range holds and be out fast when it doesn't. Signal fired. We took it. Update coming. Disclaimer: Not financial advice. This idea is shared for educational purposes only. Trading leveraged instruments carries substantial risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always do your own research and manage your own risk.