Institutional investors are taking profits and unloading their shares onto retail buyers who are suffering from FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out).
"Technical Analysis Using Multiple Timeframes" by Brian Shannon is a 2008 publication that aims to provide traders with a practical guide to technical analysis. The book emphasizes the importance of using multiple timeframes to analyze markets, which allows traders to gain a more complete understanding of market trends and make more informed trading decisions.
Squeeze Dynamics allows investors to maximize profit and minimize risk in both swing and day trading. By analyzing the interplay between higher timeframe structure and lower timeframe compression, Shannon’s method helps traders position themselves ahead of significant breakouts or breakdowns, rather than chasing price after the move has already occurred. Squeeze Dynamics allows investors to maximize profit and
Shannon also covers short squeeze dynamics in detail, explaining why they occur and how to distinguish between “knee-jerk” and “structural” squeezes.
What you trade (Stocks, Crypto, Forex, Options)? What you trade (Stocks, Crypto, Forex, Options)
The “Participate Short/Avoid Long” phase. The market enters a confirmed downtrend. Shannon recommends in the decline via short sales, while strictly avoiding any long positions until a new accumulation phase emerges.
Explore authorized video courses, market recaps, and live trading rooms hosted by established professionals to see these concepts applied to real-time market data. markup (Stage 2)
Brian Shannon’s foundational book, Technical Analysis Using Multiple Timeframes
Shannon emphasizes that every asset moves through four distinct phases: accumulation (Stage 1), markup (Stage 2), distribution (Stage 3), and markdown (Stage 4). Multiple timeframe analysis helps identify which stage a stock is in on a macro level before executing trades on a micro level.
Applying these concepts systematically helps transform technical analysis from a collection of indicators into a comprehensive trading plan. Share public link
: Your net profit and loss (P&L) is strictly determined by where you buy and sell a security relative to its price.
Institutional investors are taking profits and unloading their shares onto retail buyers who are suffering from FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out).
"Technical Analysis Using Multiple Timeframes" by Brian Shannon is a 2008 publication that aims to provide traders with a practical guide to technical analysis. The book emphasizes the importance of using multiple timeframes to analyze markets, which allows traders to gain a more complete understanding of market trends and make more informed trading decisions.
Squeeze Dynamics allows investors to maximize profit and minimize risk in both swing and day trading. By analyzing the interplay between higher timeframe structure and lower timeframe compression, Shannon’s method helps traders position themselves ahead of significant breakouts or breakdowns, rather than chasing price after the move has already occurred.
Shannon also covers short squeeze dynamics in detail, explaining why they occur and how to distinguish between “knee-jerk” and “structural” squeezes.
What you trade (Stocks, Crypto, Forex, Options)?
The “Participate Short/Avoid Long” phase. The market enters a confirmed downtrend. Shannon recommends in the decline via short sales, while strictly avoiding any long positions until a new accumulation phase emerges.
Explore authorized video courses, market recaps, and live trading rooms hosted by established professionals to see these concepts applied to real-time market data.
Brian Shannon’s foundational book, Technical Analysis Using Multiple Timeframes
Shannon emphasizes that every asset moves through four distinct phases: accumulation (Stage 1), markup (Stage 2), distribution (Stage 3), and markdown (Stage 4). Multiple timeframe analysis helps identify which stage a stock is in on a macro level before executing trades on a micro level.
Applying these concepts systematically helps transform technical analysis from a collection of indicators into a comprehensive trading plan. Share public link
: Your net profit and loss (P&L) is strictly determined by where you buy and sell a security relative to its price.