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A very common mistake in Volume Profile:
Some traders think that any area with high volume means:
“Buy if the price reaches it”
or
“Price will bounce directly if it touches it”
And this is an incomplete understanding.
The truth is that high-volume areas do not always mean direct entry,
but often they are acceptance and balance zones,
meaning the market spent time and traded heavily there because it found a relatively fair price.
The problem here is that the beginner trader sees:
High volume = strong area = direct entry
While the smarter trader first asks:
• Is this area an acceptance or rejection zone?
• Did the price return to it from above or below?
• Is there clear price slowdown or rejection?
• Is the market in balance or in a rush?
• Does the area align with the market trend or oppose it?
The smarter use of Volume Profile:
• Watch the **POC** and not just the shape of the bars
• Distinguish between HVN and LVN
• Understand that HVN often represents comfort and balance zones
• Understand that LVN may be faster crossing areas because the market didn’t accept the price there much
• Always wait for the price to react to the area, and don’t treat the profile as a standalone entry signal
An important example:
If the price returns to a high-volume area within a sideways market, it may fluctuate around it a lot.
But if it returns to a low-volume area after a clear rush, it may pass through more quickly.
So the idea is not:
“Where is the volume only?”
but:
“What does the presence of this volume here mean?”
There’s a big difference between someone who sees volume bars…
and someone who understands how the market’s story is told.
Would you like a simple and very clear explanation in the next tweet for:
POC, VAH, VAL, HVN, and LVN?