Overview
For the same instrument, charts drawn with different time cycles are like maps of the same city at different zoom levels:- Monthly chart: Like looking down on the entire city from high above—what you see is the “overall city layout” and the big direction: bull market, bear market, long-term rise, or decline.
- Weekly chart: Like a city traffic map—focus on main roads and key intersections: medium-term trend, key support/resistance, and swing structure.
- Daily chart: Like a neighborhood map—look at specific intersections and traffic lights: short-term fluctuations and entry/exit timing.
Don’t stare at a single tree—first look at the whole forest; after confirming the direction, decide which small path to use for entry and exit.Goals of this section:
- Help you understand the strengths and limitations of daily, weekly, and monthly charts
- Learn the approach of “use higher timeframes to set direction, use lower timeframes to find entry/exit points”
- Avoid common pitfalls: impulsive trading by looking at only one timeframe, or getting overwhelmed by too many timeframes
Choosing a Timeframe
Daily Chart
1. Characteristics- Each candlestick represents one day of price action (open, high, low, close)
- Reflects short-term sentiment + short-to-medium-term trend
- Contains a lot of data and reacts more sensitively to news and sentiment
- Rich in detail and captures many technical signals (patterns, moving averages, breakouts, etc.)
- For most traders, it is the most commonly used and most important working timeframe
- Balances “tradability” and “observability”
- Noisier and easier to be disturbed by short-term volatility
- Using the daily chart alone to judge the “long-term trend” can be misleading due to false breakouts and fake rebounds
- Swing traders: holding periods from a few days to a few weeks
- Short-to-medium-term investors: want to capture a large segment within a trend but need the daily chart to find relatively reasonable entry/exit points
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Common uses:
- Finding breakout/pullback entries
- Observing moving-average systems (5/10/20/60-day, etc.)
- Analyzing common chart patterns (head and shoulders, triangles, ranges/boxes, etc.)
Weekly Chart
1. Characteristics- Each candlestick represents one week of price action
- Compresses 5 trading days of information into one candle
- More like “denoising and compressing” daily data
- Significantly less noise; the trend outline is clearer
- Easier to see important trend turning points and key support/resistance zones
- False breakouts and fake rebounds are harder to “fake” on the weekly timeframe
- Slower to respond; not suitable for ultra-short-term trading
- For those who focus on intraday swings, the rhythm can feel “slow”
- Medium-to-long-term investors: holding periods from several weeks to several months or longer
- Swing traders: use the weekly chart to judge the medium-term trend and the daily chart to find entry/exit points
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Common uses:
- Determining whether the market is in a higher-timeframe uptrend, consolidation, or downtrend
- Using weekly moving averages (e.g., 10-week, 20-week, 60-week) to assess long-term support/resistance
- Identifying “key top/bottom areas” (weekly high-volume long wicks, weekly-level patterns)
Monthly Chart
1. Characteristics- Each candlestick represents one month of price action
- Extremely compressed; focuses on long-cycle trends and major turning points
- Best reflects the long-term evolution of an asset’s value: bull/bear cycles and industry rise/fall
- Most informative for judging the “big trend” (especially for indices and sectors)
- Suitable for long-term asset allocation decisions (e.g., adjusting the stock/bond/cash mix)
- Limited help for short-to-medium-term trading
- Very few signals; updates slowly; not suitable for high-frequency decisions
- Long-term investors / asset allocators: focus on 3–5 years or longer
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Macro + sector rotation perspective:
- Viewing the long-term bull/bear of an index
- Assessing whether an industry is likely forming a long-term top or bottom
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Common uses:
- Identifying major long-term bottoms (multi-year low consolidation followed by a breakout on expanding volume)
- Identifying major long-term tops (years of high-level wide-range consolidation with heavy volume, then a clear breakdown of key support)
- Combining economic cycles and valuation levels to adjust asset classes
Daily × Weekly Combined Analysis
The classic multi-timeframe combination is: weekly + daily (with the monthly chart as a macro backdrop).Multi-Timeframe Confluence
“Confluence” means signals from different timeframes point in the same direction, greatly increasing the credibility of the judgment. Typical workflow:Monthly chart for the macro trend → weekly chart to set direction → daily chart to find entry/exit pointsSimplified into a few practical steps:
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Look at the weekly chart first: determine the big direction
- Weekly chart in an uptrend: higher highs and higher lows, major moving averages sloping up
- Then short-term focus is “buying the dip,” not constantly trying to pick tops and short
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Then look at the daily chart: find the entry timing
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Under the premise that the weekly trend is up:
- Daily pullback to key support (moving averages / prior lows / range lower bound) with a stabilization signal
- Or an upside breakout from a consolidation range with expanding volume
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Under the premise that the weekly trend is up:
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Example of confluence:
- Weekly: above a long-term rising trendline, just bounced from weekly-level support
- Daily: hammer + a high-volume bullish candle + reclaiming a key daily moving average
- This long signal is far more reliable than looking at the daily pattern alone
- Weekly chart = “steering wheel”: first confirm whether the car is heading north or south
- Daily chart = “gas and brakes”: then decide when to accelerate and when to slow down
Timeframe Conflicts
In practice, it’s very common that signals across timeframes seem contradictory, for example:- Weekly trend is up, but the daily chart shows short-term topping signals
- Weekly trend is down, but the daily chart shows an oversold rebound
1. Clarify which timeframe is the “primary timeframe”
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For medium-term holders:
- The weekly chart is the primary timeframe
- Daily signals are used more to adjust position sizing or optimize entry/exit
- You won’t completely change a weekly-level view because of a small daily pullback
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For short-term traders:
- The daily chart—or even the 60-minute chart—is the primary timeframe
- The weekly chart is more like “background information”
First ask yourself: which timeframe do you make money from—who is the “boss”?
2. How to handle conflicts
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Case 1:
- Weekly uptrend, daily shows a pullback/top signal
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Medium-term approach:
- Treat it as a “normal correction,” not “trend termination”
- The key decision is whether to reduce exposure to lock in some profit, then add back at better levels
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Short-term approach:
- Exit temporarily based on daily signals, and re-enter after the daily chart stabilizes
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Case 2:
- Weekly downtrend, daily shows an oversold rebound signal
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Medium-term approach:
- Usually avoid “chasing the rebound”; stay cautious or wait
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Short-term approach:
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You may participate, but be clear:
- This is a counter-trend short-term bet—keep size small and stops tight
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You may participate, but be clear:
Lower timeframes obey higher-timeframe direction: the higher timeframe decides “long or short,” the lower timeframe only decides “at what price.”
Core Concepts
1. Primary Timeframe and Execution Timeframe
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Primary timeframe:
- The core timeframe you use to judge trend direction and your holding horizon
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For example:
- Medium-term traders use the weekly chart as the primary timeframe
- Short-term traders use the daily or 60-minute chart as the primary timeframe
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Execution timeframe:
- A smaller timeframe used to choose entry/exit points and set stops
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For example:
- If weekly is the primary timeframe, daily is the execution timeframe
- If daily is the primary timeframe, 60/15-minute charts are execution timeframes
2. Noise vs. Signal
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Noise:
- Short-term fluctuations that are hard to explain and highly random
- Have little impact on long-term trends
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Signal:
- Structural changes that are also visible on higher timeframes
- For example, weekly-level trend reversals, high-volume breakouts/breakdowns at key levels
- Reversal signals on weekly/monthly charts are often meaningful “signals”
- Many “patterns” on 1-minute or 5-minute charts are “noise” caused by order matching and emotion
3. The Nested Structure of Trends
Market trends are “nested”:- On higher timeframes (weekly/monthly), there may be a complete uptrend
- Within it are many daily-level pullbacks and rebounds
- Zooming further in, it can be broken into a series of 60-minute and 15-minute fluctuations
- You won’t be easily scared out by one or two large bearish daily candles (if the weekly structure is still intact)
- You won’t blindly cling to the “false hope” of daily rebounds within a clear weekly downtrend
Practical Applications
Case 1: Medium-Term Swing — Weekly Sets Direction, Daily Finds Entries
Suppose you follow a high-quality consumer stock and want to hold it medium-term for about 3–6 months. Steps:-
Use the weekly chart to judge the trend
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Observe the past 1–2 years:
- If price is in a long-term rising channel and the recent move is merely a pullback from the upper channel toward the mid/lower band
- Weekly moving averages (e.g., 10-week, 20-week) remain in bullish alignment
- Conclusion: the medium-term trend is still biased to the upside
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Observe the past 1–2 years:
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Use the daily chart to find entry points
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Wait for price to pull back to:
- Key daily support (prior low, range lower bound, near the 60-day moving average)
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Watch for:
- Hammer candles, long lower wicks
- Then 1–2 days of high-volume bullish candles reclaiming key moving averages
- When conditions are met, start with a small probe position and scale in as the trend confirms
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Wait for price to pull back to:
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Risk control
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Stops are usually set below:
- The most recent key daily/weekly low
- If the weekly trend is clearly damaged (break below the long-term trendline, key moving averages broken on expanding volume), consider reducing or exiting
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Stops are usually set below:
Case 2: Long-Term Investing — Monthly Judges the Macro Trend, Weekly Helps Timing
Suppose you are doing long-term investing in index/sector ETFs, with a holding period of 2–3 years or more. Steps:-
Monthly chart for valuation and macro structure
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Combine valuation (P/E, P/B) with the monthly trend:
- When valuation is in a historically cheap range and the monthly chart is either long-term sideways or breaking out from a long-term base on expanding volume → it may be a good long-term positioning opportunity
- When valuation is extremely expensive and the monthly chart shows a steep rise, high-volume big bullish candles, and long upper wicks → stay alert
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Combine valuation (P/E, P/B) with the monthly trend:
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Weekly chart for timing
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Under the premise that the monthly outlook is favorable:
- Use weekly pullbacks and low-volume corrective phases to buy in tranches
- Avoid going all-in at once when the weekly chart is short-term “overheated”
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Under the premise that the monthly outlook is favorable:
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Daily chart as reference only
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For this style, the daily chart is mainly used to:
- Judge whether extreme short-term sentiment has appeared (e.g., panic selloff days)
- Increase buying intensity moderately on extreme panic days (contrarian action)
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For this style, the daily chart is mainly used to:
FAQs
Q1: The weekly chart is bullish, but the daily chart is bearish—who do I listen to?
The key is your holding period and trading plan.-
If you are a medium-term holder (weeks to months):
- Prioritize the weekly chart; daily pullback signals are more “entry optimization” than “direction reversal”
- You can manage volatility via partial profit-taking/hedging rather than fully cutting
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If you are a short-term trader (within a few days):
- Prioritize the daily chart, even combined with the 60-minute timeframe
- Weekly bullish/bearish is just the backdrop; be flexible based on daily signals
Q2: If I invest long-term, do I still need to watch the daily chart every day?
In most cases, no—and it’s often not helpful.-
Long-term investors should focus more on:
- Business fundamentals, industry trends, valuation levels
- Higher-timeframe structures on monthly/weekly charts
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Staring at daily or intraday charts too often:
- Makes you emotionally driven by short-term fluctuations
- Increases the likelihood of “impulsively changing the plan”
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Define clearly:
- The buy thesis (industry, company, valuation)
- Holding horizon
- Triggers for adjustment (fundamental deterioration, extreme valuation bubble, severe technical breakdown)
- Then review weekly/monthly charts and fundamentals at fixed times (e.g., weekly or monthly), instead of being dragged around by daily emotions.
Q3: Is more timeframes always better—daily, weekly, monthly, plus 4-hour and 1-hour?
Not necessarily. More doesn’t mean better, and it can easily cause “conflicting information and paralysis.” Common issues:- You look at 5-minute and want to scalp
- You see a 1-hour signal and want to do short-term
- Then you look at daily and think you can swing trade
- Eventually: your plan and behavior don’t match at all
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For most people, 2–3 timeframes are enough:
- Long timeframe (weekly/monthly) to set the macro context
- Mid timeframe (daily) to set the trading bias
- If trading short-term, add an execution timeframe (60/15-minute)
- First learn to use “a few timeframes well,” then decide whether you need extra auxiliary timeframes—rather than trying to “have it all” from the start.
Summary
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Daily, weekly, and monthly charts provide views of the same price action at different time scales:
- Daily: more detailed; suitable for short-to-medium-term operations and precise entry/exit selection
- Weekly: smoother; suitable for judging intermediate trends and key support/resistance
- Monthly: more macro; suitable for assessing long-term bull/bear cycles and asset-allocation direction
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The core idea of multi-timeframe analysis is:
- Higher timeframes set direction; lower timeframes find rhythm
- Build a clear “primary timeframe” and “execution timeframe” to avoid being swayed by short-term noise
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In live trading, pay special attention to:
- When signals conflict, obey your primary timeframe
- Assess your holding horizon and temperament and choose matching timeframes
- Don’t try to “predict the future” with charts—use them to improve the probability and discipline of decisions
Further Reading
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Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets — John J. Murphy
- A classic technical analysis textbook that systematically explains trends, patterns, moving averages, and multi-timeframe analysis
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Trading for a Living — Alexander Elder
- Its explanation of the “Triple Screen (multi-timeframe) analysis” is very helpful for understanding how timeframes work together
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Educational content from major brokerages and trading platforms
- Search keywords: “multi-timeframe confluence,” “daily-weekly-monthly live trading,” “trend hierarchy,” etc.
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Practical suggestions
- Pick a familiar index or stock and review 3–5 years of history on daily, weekly, and monthly charts
- Mark key turning points and observe how they differ across timeframes
- Gradually form your own “multi-timeframe analysis template” through backtesting.
