The weekly chart for Meta is a great example of how the volume point of control and accumulation and distribution indicators gives shape to the price action on the chart. And when combined with volume price analysis, the reversal points, congestion phases, and potential breakouts are clearly defined.
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By Anna Coulling...
A look at key levels on the SPY (ETF for the S&P500) as we move towards month-end to see if buyers will be stepping in as they have done each month since January. In addition, we also explain how the index is heavily influenced by the technology sector in a week when major players in this sector are reporting.
https://youtu.be/oibO3UDkqnI...
Cryptocurrency strength indicator vs currency strength indicator on TradingView and more volume price analysis across the markets
https://youtu.be/kp0_6WvS3vw
https://youtu.be/wsHvQ_k0GOc...
You know how it goes. The stock is rising nicely and then crash, it falls sharply and develops a price waterfall as it descends to a level never seen before. And then it appears to languish at this level with no hope of recovery. But slowly it does and soon breaks higher developing a bullish trend. The consolidation phase is the accumulation phase where the market makers are doing just that and preparing for the next major campaign for the stock, and hence the reason these price patterns can be so profitable as you are buying a stock at a low price along with the market makers.
https://youtu.be/WLtt3tka2pE...
Markets move on risk appetite, short and simple. Risk on and risk off describes the flow of money as it moves from one market to another. But which charts and indices best describe risk and market sentiment?
https://youtu.be/AbPghOlY6Ao...
https://youtu.be/f-hdUOtp1F8
Are All Trends the Same? The Short Answer Is No!
Trends look similar at first glance. Price moves in one direction. But not all trends are equal. Volume price analysis (VPA) reveals the differences. This helps traders adapt strategies. Quantum indicators make spotting types easy.
In this video you will discover that now all trends are the same. Each is different and it pays to understand what type of trend you are trading before you enter any position in the forex market.
Trend with Momentum
Momentum trends build steadily. Price advances with increasing volume. Candles widen consistently. This shows growing conviction. Buyers (or sellers) dominate. Quantum Trend Monitor on NinjaTrader stays aligned. These trends last longer. Ride them with trailing stops.
Trend with Volatility
Volatile trends swing widely. Price surges then pulls back sharply. Volume spikes on extremes. This reflects sentiment shifts. VPA spots conviction—high volume on direction moves. Low volume pullbacks offer entries. Quantum volatility indicator highlights these phases.
Congested or Choppy Trends
Some "trends" are weak....
None of us are patient, yet when it comes to congestion phases this is where patience really does pay off, as these are the price regions where trends are created and born. And remember Wyckoff's second law of cause and effect, the longer the cause the greater will be the effect. In other words this brings time into the equation.
https://youtu.be/J8UM_9HCQvA...
https://youtu.be/bv6Y5Sylt7A
How to Trade Volatility in the Forex Market
Volatility in forex refers to the magnitude of price swings. High volatility means big moves—great for profits but risky. Low volatility means ranges—often frustrating. Trading volatility isn't about predicting direction perfectly. It's about positioning for movement (or lack of it) with discipline.
Successful volatility trading uses volume price analysis (VPA) for confirmation. High volume on swings shows conviction. Low volume warns of traps. Quantum tools enhance this on MT5 or NinjaTrader.
This morning's price action on the British pound was classic, following the release of UK news and the BOE statement. The primary pair for trading is of course cable, but the price action here was extreme, whipsawing in a wide range and making it almost impossible to trade. So what's the answer?
In short, look to other currency pairs and, in particular, the cross-currency pairs. In this case it was the GBP/AUD which delivered tradable opportunities which the GBP/USD did not. So remember, when you...