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What Does Price Tell You?

The Essence of Price Moves: Supply vs. Demand

Simply put:
  • More people want to buy → demand exceeds supply → prices rise
  • More people want to sell → supply exceeds demand → prices fall
But the question is: how do you tell whether “more people want to buy” or “more people want to sell”?

Candlestick Charts: The Battle Report of Bulls vs. Bears

Each candlestick records the outcome of the bull–bear fight over a period of time: Four key pieces of information in a candlestick:
  1. Open: the price at the start of the battle
  2. Close: the price at the end of the battle
  3. High: bulls’ strongest point of attack
  4. Low: bears’ strongest point of attack
Practical interpretation:
  • Large bullish candle (red): bulls dominate; strong buying
  • Large bearish candle (green): bears dominate; heavy selling
  • Long upper wick: bulls were strong, but got pushed back by bears
  • Long lower wick: bears were strong, but got counterattacked by bulls

Volume: Confirming the Reliability of Price Moves

Key principle: price signals are only reliable when confirmed by volume. Four price–volume scenarios:
  1. Price up, volume up → healthy uptrend, sustainable ✅
  2. Price up, volume down → weakening momentum, watch risk ⚠️
  3. Price down, volume up → downtrend confirmed, avoid bottom-fishing ❌
  4. Price down, volume down → declining momentum fades, may be bottoming ⚠️
Practical use:
  • If price makes a new high but volume shrinks, it suggests insufficient buying, and the rally may not be sustainable
  • If price drops sharply but volume is small, it suggests limited selling pressure and may be a technical pullback

Identifying Buy and Sell Timing

Three Characteristics of a Technical Bottom

1. Price–Volume Divergence

Phenomenon: price keeps falling, but volume contracts明显 Meaning: selling pressure dries up; bearish strength weakens Example: after consecutive declines, a big down day occurs with volume less than half the average

2. Oversold Rebound Signal

Phenomenon: price falls too much in a short time and moves far away from moving averages Meaning: the decline is too fast; a technical rebound may be imminent Quantitative standard: price drops more than 15% below the 20-day moving average

3. Support Confirmation

Phenomenon: price finds support multiple times at a certain level Meaning: strong buying support exists at that level How to identify: historical lows, round-number levels, key moving averages How Openstrat identifies technical bottoms:
  • Analyze multiple timeframes simultaneously (daily, hourly, minute)
  • Combine signals from multiple technical indicators
  • Compute the probability of bottom formation (50%–100%)

Warning Signs of a Technical Top

1. Price Down with Volume Up

Phenomenon: price falls while volume expands Meaning: profit-taking and panic selling surge at the same time Response: reduce positions or stop out immediately

2. Breakdown to the Downside

Phenomenon: breaks below a key support level (e.g., the 20-day moving average) Meaning: the bulls’ defense line is breached; the trend may reverse Confirmation standard: closes below support for two consecutive days

3. Heavy Resistance

Phenomenon: price repeatedly rallies and pulls back, unable to break a certain level Meaning: strong selling pressure at that level; limited upside Practical takeaway: don’t fantasize about a breakout—take profits in time

The Power of Trend: Trade with the Trend

A simple way to judge trends:
  • Uptrend: successive highs are higher, and lows are higher
  • Downtrend: successive highs are lower, and lows are lower
  • Sideways consolidation: highs and lows fluctuate within a range
Golden rules of trend trading:
  1. Don’t trade against a trend once it’s established
  2. Early trend stages are the best entry opportunities
  3. Prepare to exit near the end of a trend

Common Traps and Misconceptions

1. The “Catching the Bottom” Trap: The Knife Is Still Falling

Wrong idea: the stock has fallen a lot, so it must be cheap—time to catch the bottom. Reality:
  • In a downtrend, every time you think it’s “cheap enough,” it can keep falling
  • There is no lowest—only lower
  • Catching the bottom halfway down the mountain is the norm
What to do instead:
  • Wait for confirmation that the decline has stabilized before considering entry
  • Scale in—don’t buy all at once
  • Set a stop-loss to control downside risk
Best timing for bottom-fishing: ✅ Volume contracts to an extreme ✅ A clear rebound signal appears ✅ Multiple indicators converge to confirm a bottom

2. Chasing Highs and Selling Lows: The Classic Retail Mistake

The psychology behind chasing highs and selling lows:
  1. See a big surge → fear missing out → buy at the top
  2. Price drops after buying → psychological pressure rises → hope for a rebound
  3. It keeps dropping → panic erupts → sell at the bottom
Why it keeps happening:
  • Herd mentality: seeing others profit triggers copycat behavior
  • Loss aversion: fantasize during small losses; despair and capitulate during big losses
  • Confirmation bias: only pay attention to information that supports your view
How to avoid it:
  • Make a buying plan—don’t trade on impulse
  • Set stop-loss levels and execute them strictly
  • Focus on technical signals, not just price moves

3. The Boundaries of Technical Analysis: When It Doesn’t Work

When technical analysis fails:

Major unexpected events

  • Geopolitical conflicts
  • Natural disasters
  • Sudden policy changes
  • Major financial scandals
Example: In March 2020, when the pandemic broke out, all technical indicators failed and the market saw panic selling.

Extreme market sentiment

  • Extreme greed (bubble phase)
  • Extreme fear (financial crisis)
  • Liquidity droughts
How to respond:
  • When major events occur, prioritize risk control
  • In extreme conditions, reduce exposure or pause trading
  • Wait until sentiment stabilizes before applying technical analysis

Stock-specific special situations

  • Trading halts due to restructurings and subsequent resumptions
  • Earnings blowups or major upside surprises
  • Manipulation by dominant players
How to identify:
  • Abnormal volume changes
  • Price action severely diverging from the broader market
  • Large swings without a clear reason

Practical Skills Checklist

After completing this chapter, you should be able to:

✅ Core Skills

  • Read basic candlestick patterns
  • Understand the relationship between volume and price
  • Identify basic support and resistance levels

✅ Advanced Capabilities

  • Judge trend direction and strength
  • Identify preliminary signals of technical bottoms and tops
  • Understand the four basic price–volume scenarios

✅ Risk Awareness

  • Know the risks of bottom-fishing and the right timing
  • Understand the limitations of technical analysis
  • Recognize the psychological trap of chasing highs and selling lows

Key Takeaways

  • Price reflects everything: candlesticks and volume directly express market sentiment
  • Price–volume alignment is essential: price moves must be confirmed by volume
  • The trend is your friend: trading with the trend improves win rates
  • Technical bottoms have signatures: price–volume divergence, oversold rebound, support confirmation
  • Avoid common traps: don’t blindly bottom-fish, don’t chase highs and sell lows, and understand the limits of technical analysis

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: Is technical analysis really useful?

A: Technical analysis is a probabilistic tool. It can’t guarantee 100% accuracy, but it can significantly improve decision quality. The key is to:
  • Combine multiple indicators for a holistic view
  • Use it alongside fundamental analysis
  • Execute strict risk management

Q: Which indicators should beginners learn first?

A: A recommended learning order:
  1. Candlesticks and volume (foundation)
  2. Support and resistance (core)
  3. Moving averages (trend)
  4. MACD (momentum)
  5. RSI (overbought/oversold)

Q: Does technical analysis apply to all markets?

A: The principles of technical analysis apply to any market with trading volume, including:
  • Stock markets
  • Crypto
  • FX
  • Futures/commodities But each market’s characteristics require parameter adjustments.

Further Reading