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Not moving, let's talk about the essentials, correct ways to view structure, and methods. Also, how to distinguish between point and short-term movements.
One day of volume increase, three days of fluctuation. Bai Pan has established a trend cycle, as well as a time cycle. There is also the phase of time correction after volume surges; generally, rapid volume increases are assessed by the strength of the volume, with some based on hourly charts, others on four-hour charts, as well as daily and weekly charts. The typical patterns are large bullish surges and large bearish declines, like Monday when the volume surged upward, the hourly chart showed strength, then fluctuated for three hours before continuing to strengthen, then fluctuated again for three hours before continuing to strengthen. After that, it continues to oscillate. Therefore, whether the volume surge is complete can be judged by the duration of the oscillation. After three volume surges, a short-term trend can form, but if the oscillation lasts only two hours, it cannot continue as a short-term trend, because it risks turning into a small unilateral move again.
At the four-hour level, it is easier to distinguish. After three large bullish candles or three large bearish candles, it indicates a fragmented bullish or bearish trend, or after three large bullish candles, a correction with one bearish candle and then three large bearish candles correcting one bullish candle. Here, this is a correction; fragmented bullish or bearish patterns are time corrections, while a single opposite candle (bullish or bearish) indicates a price correction. When such patterns emerge, a short-term trend can run, even if it continues unilaterally, it won't last long. However, corrections of this type usually involve three candles; after three fragmented bullish or bearish candles, the trend will resume in one direction. Therefore, it cannot continue as a short-term trend, and the stop-loss space should be smaller, while the profit-taking space should be larger.
In short, the longer the oscillation duration, the greater the space for volume expansion; the larger the volume expansion, the longer the correction time. The remaining factor is the influence of the fundamentals.