@Priceactionlivee YouTube Audit: 2,820 Subs After 545 Forex Videos
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@Priceactionlivee is an India-based forex education channel sitting at 2,820 subscribers with 545 lifetime uploads and roughly 187,000 total views. That math works out to about 343 views per video and 5 subscribers per upload — a high-volume, low-conversion pattern that tells a specific story about the niche they're in.
Channel data · captured Jun 19, 2026
- Handle
- @Priceactionlivee
- Subscribers
- 2,820
- Videos
- 545
- Country
- India
We are helping Forex Traders & Beginners To Build A Successful Career In The Forex Industry. We are not Financial Advisors, all content provided is for educational purposes only. We are here to provide free technical and fundamental analysis. Please consult with a professional before taking any trades. ''My goal is to share my knowledge with traders all around the world''. This channel is dedicated to: ✔ Forex Trading (XAUUSD / Gold) ✔ Bitcoin & Crypto Market Analysis ✔ Live Trading Sessions ✔ Scalping & Intraday Strategies ✔ Support & Resistance & Price Action.
The 2,820 subscriber count puts Priceactionlivee in the early-grinding tier of YouTube forex education, which is a strange place to be sitting after 545 uploads. The Indian forex YouTube space has its giants — channels like Trading Chanakya pull six and seven figures of subs — and a thick mid-tier in the 20K-50K range. 2,820 after 545 videos is roughly 5 subscribers per upload. That subscriber-to-content ratio is the first thing I'd dig into, because it's the line that signals whether you have a discovery problem, a conversion problem, or both.
The 'livee' in the handle is doing a lot of the explanatory work for the math. 545 videos producing only 187,208 lifetime views (about 343 per upload) is way more consistent with a stream-archive channel than a planned-video channel. Live trading sessions archive as videos but rarely behave like videos on YouTube's recommendation surface — they don't get the same search push, thumbnails default to auto-generated stills, and titles often end up generic ('Market Analysis - July 14' kind of thing). If most of those 545 uploads are stream archives, the view ceiling is structurally explained without needing to invoke content quality at all.
Something is off in the most recent 13 uploads, and I want to be honest about not knowing exactly what. All 13 are long-form, no Shorts in the rotation, and the titles and view counts come back empty when scraped externally. That could mean a few things: a metadata oddity where titles aren't being populated properly (a real SEO problem if so — YouTube needs the title text to index the video), scheduled or recently-ended live streams that haven't fully published as VODs yet, or unlisted content leaking into the public feed. Each of these has a different fix, and the channel owner could check this in Studio in about 90 seconds.
Forex education content also runs into YouTube-wide algorithmic friction that caps growth regardless of effort. The category sits in the limited-monetization zone — financial advice content gets policy-level scrutiny by design, even with proper disclaimers. This channel does have the right language in the description: 'educational purposes,' 'not financial advisors,' 'consult a professional.' That language keeps the channel safe, but it doesn't unstick the discovery engine. Combine that with India being a market where retail forex trading sits in a regulatory grey area, and the ceiling is lower than the sheer volume of uploads would suggest is fair.
The genuine strengths here are real — niche specificity, multi-year commitment, and compliance-aware framing. 545 uploads is not nothing. That's a back catalog most channels never build, and the willingness to keep showing up for that many sessions is the part of YouTube that money can't buy. The disclaimer language reads like someone who has actually thought about what YouTube wants from financial creators rather than someone learning compliance the hard way. The raw inventory exists; what's missing is the second layer that turns inventory into reach.
If I were sitting next to whoever runs this, the single move I'd test first is reshaping a small percentage of the live archive into standalone VOD content. Take the best 20-30 minutes from a session — the actual setup that played out, the actual lesson — give it a specific title ('Why I shorted EURUSD on this fakeout' beats 'Live Analysis 7/14'), make a custom thumbnail, and publish it as its own video. Doesn't need to be every stream. Two a week, polished, would change the discovery math because the algorithm finally has something searchable to push. The 545-video back catalog is also raw material for Shorts, which the channel currently doesn't touch at all (0 in recent uploads) — that's probably the cheapest reach left on the table.
Common questions
How many subscribers does @Priceactionlivee have right now?
2,820 as of June 2026. For context, that puts the channel in the early-grinding tier of YouTube forex education — the giants in the Indian forex space sit in the hundreds of thousands, and the established mid-tier sits at 20K-50K. The interesting wrinkle is that 2,820 subscribers comes after 545 lifetime uploads, which works out to roughly 5 subscribers per video. That subscriber-to-upload ratio is lower than you'd expect from the volume of work, and it points to a discovery or conversion gap rather than a content-quantity problem.
What does @Priceactionlivee's channel actually cover?
Based on the description and the handle, it's forex trading education aimed at an India audience, structured around price action — the technical analysis school that emphasizes raw chart reading over indicators. The 'livee' in the handle, plus the channel's view-per-video math of ~343 lifetime views across 545 videos, strongly suggests a lot of the content is live market analysis sessions that get archived as videos. The description is careful to note the channel is not financial advisors and that everything is educational, which is the right disclaimer language for forex content under YouTube's current policies.
How often does @Priceactionlivee upload videos?
The exact recent cadence is hard to pin down from outside — the last 13 uploads all show as long-form with empty titles and 0 views in scraped data, which is unusual and could mean live-stream archives or a metadata issue. What I can say with confidence: 545 lifetime uploads on a channel this size implies a high-frequency historical cadence, probably averaging one video every 2-3 days at minimum. That's far more content than most growing channels produce, which raises the question of whether reducing frequency and increasing per-video polish would actually convert better than the current grind.
Why does @Priceactionlivee have low views per video?
The lifetime average works out to ~343 views per upload (187,208 total views divided by 545 videos), and the most likely explanation is the content format. Live stream archives — which the channel name and view pattern both suggest dominate the catalog — don't get the same algorithmic push as planned VOD content on YouTube. They tend to have generic auto-titles, default thumbnails, and lower search discoverability. Stack that against forex sitting in YouTube's limited-monetization, algorithmically-friction-y category, and a ceiling around 300-400 views per upload becomes structurally explainable rather than just a content-quality issue.
What's the biggest growth move @Priceactionlivee could test?
Repackaging live content into standalone VODs. Take the best 20-30 minutes from a live session, give it a specific title ('How I read the EURUSD fakeout on July 14' beats 'Live Analysis 7/14'), make a custom thumbnail, and publish it as its own video. Even doing this for two streams a week would create searchable, indexable content the algorithm can actually push. The 545-video back catalog also represents raw material that could be re-cut into Shorts to feed the discovery surface the channel currently doesn't touch at all (0 Shorts in recent uploads).
Is @Priceactionlivee monetized on YouTube?
I can't confirm monetization status from outside data. What I can say is that at 2,820 subscribers, the channel is past the 1,000-sub YPP threshold and presumably eligible if watch hours qualify, which is very plausible given 545 uploads of mostly long-form content. The bigger question for a forex channel isn't eligibility — it's whether ads actually run on the videos. YouTube's advertiser-friendly guidelines treat financial advice content cautiously, so even monetized channels in this niche often see limited ads serving and lower CPMs than general-interest content.
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