📊 Wyckoff SchematicsThe Wyckoff Method involves a five-step approach to stock selection and trade entry, which can be summarized as follows:
Determine the present position and probable future trend of the market. Is the market consolidating or trending? Does your analysis of market structure, supply and demand indicate the direction that is likely in the near future? This assessment should help you decide whether to be in the market at all and, if so, whether to take long or short positions. Use both bar charts and Point and Figure charts of the major market indices for Step 1.
Select stocks in harmony with the trend. In an uptrend, select stocks that are stronger than the market. For instance, look for stocks that demonstrate greater percentage increases than the market during rallies and smaller decreases during reactions. In a downtrend, do the reverse – choose stocks that are weaker than the market. If you are not sure about a specific issue, drop it and move on to the next one. Use bar charts of individual stocks to compare with those of the most relevant market index for Step 2.
Select stocks with a “cause” that equals or exceeds your minimum objective. A critical component of Wyckoff's trade selection and management was his unique method of identifying price targets using Point and Figure (P&F) projections for both long and short trades. In Wyckoff's fundamental law of “Cause and Effect,” the horizontal P&F count within a trading range represents the cause, while the subsequent price movement represents the effect. Therefore, if you are planning to take long positions, choose stocks that are under accumulation or re-accumulation and have built a sufficient cause to satisfy your objective. Step 3 relies on the use of Point and Figure charts of individual stocks.
Determine the stocks' readiness to move. Apply the nine tests for buying or for selling (described below). For instance, in a trading range after a prolonged rally, does the evidence from the nine selling tests suggest that significant supply is entering the market and that a short position may be warranted? Or in an apparent accumulation trading range, do the nine buying tests indicate that supply has been successfully absorbed, as evidenced further by a low-volume spring and an even lower-volume test of that spring? Use bar charts and Point and Figure charts of individual stocks for Step 4.
Time your commitment with a turn in the stock market index. Three-quarters or more of individual issues move in harmony with the general market, so you improve the odds of a successful trade by having the power of the overall market behind it. Specific Wyckoff principles help you anticipate potential market turns, including a change of character of price action (such as the largest down-bar on the highest volume after a long uptrend), as well as manifestations of Wyckoff's three laws (see below). Put your stop-loss in place and then trail it, as appropriate, until you close out the position. Use bar and Point and Figure charts for Step 5.
🔹PS — preliminary support, where substantial buying begins to provide pronounced support after a prolonged down-move. Volume increases and price spread widens, signaling that the down-move may be approaching its end.
🔹SC — selling climax, the point at which widening spread and selling pressure usually climaxes and heavy or panicky selling by the public is being absorbed by larger professional interests at or near a bottom. Often price will close well off the low in a SC, reflecting the buying by these large interests.
🔹AR — automatic rally, which occurs because intense selling pressure has greatly diminished. A wave of buying easily pushes prices up; this is further fueled by short covering. The high of this rally will help define the upper boundary of an accumulation TR.
🔹ST — secondary test, in which price revisits the area of the SC to test the supply/demand balance at these levels. If a bottom is to be confirmed, volume and price spread should be significantly diminished as the market approaches support in the area of the SC. It is common to have multiple STs after a SC.
🔹Test — Large operators always test the market for supply throughout a TR (e.g., STs and springs) and at key points during a price advance. If considerable supply emerges on a test, the market is often not ready to be marked up. A spring is often followed by one or more tests; a successful test (indicating that further price increases will follow) typically makes a higher low on lesser volume.
🔹SOS — sign of strength, a price advance on increasing spread and relatively higher volume. Often a SOS takes place after a spring, validating the analyst’s interpretation of that prior action.
🔹LPS — last point of support, the low point of a reaction or pullback after a SOS. Backing up to an LPS means a pullback to support that was formerly resistance, on diminished spread and volume. On some charts, there may be more than one LPS, despite the ostensibly singular precision of this term.
🔹BU — “back-up”. This term is short-hand for a colorful metaphor coined by Robert Evans, one of the leading teachers of the Wyckoff method from the 1930s to the 1960s. Evans analogized the SOS to a “jump across the creek” of price resistance, and the “back up to the creek” represented both short-term profit-taking and a test for additional supply around the area of resistance. A back-up is a common structural element preceding a more substantial price mark-up, and can take on a variety of forms, including a simple pullback or a new TR at a higher level.
🔹PSY — preliminary supply , where large interests begin to unload shares in quantity after a pronounced up-move. Volume expands and price spread widens, signaling that a change in trend may be approaching.
🔹BC — buying climax, during which there are often marked increases in volume and price spread. The force of buying reaches a climax, with heavy or urgent buying by the public being filled by professional interests at prices near a top. A BC often coincides with a great earnings report or other good news, since the large operators require huge demand from the public to sell their shares without depressing the stock price.
🔹AR — automatic reaction. With intense buying substantially diminished after the BC and heavy supply continuing, an AR takes place. The low of this selloff helps define the lower boundary of the distribution TR.
🔹ST — secondary test, in which price revisits the area of the BC to test the demand/supply balance at these price levels. For a top to be confirmed, supply must outweigh demand; volume and spread should thus decrease as price approaches the resistance area of the BC. An ST may take the form of an upthrust (UT), in which price moves above the resistance represented by the BC and possibly other STs before quickly reversing to close below resistance. After a UT, price often tests the lower boundary of the TR.
🔹SOW — sign of weakness, observable as a down-move to (or slightly past) the lower boundary of the TR, usually occurring on increased spread and volume. The AR and the initial SOW(s) indicate a change of character in the price action of the stock: supply is now dominant.
🔹LPSY — last point of supply. After testing support on a SOW, a feeble rally on narrow spread shows that the market is having considerable difficulty advancing. This inability to rally may be due to weak demand, substantial supply or both. LPSYs represent exhaustion of demand and the last waves of large operators’ distribution before markdown begins in earnest.
🔹UTAD — upthrust after distribution. A UTAD is the distributional counterpart to the spring and terminal shakeout in the accumulation TR. It occurs in the latter stages of the TR and provides a definitive test of new demand after a breakout above TR resistance. Analogous to springs and shakeouts, a UTAD is not a required structural element: the TR in Distribution Schematic #1 contains a UTAD, while the TR in Distribution Schematic #2 does not.
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Wyckoffspring
Bitcoin's engineered liquidity and removal of weak handsGood morning, traders. Hope y'all stayed safe during the move yesterday. There's a lot going on in this chart, but I wanted everyone to be aware of how we are watching price action play out.
As I discussed in yesterday's chart, and then expounded upon during the morning's live stream, there would be an attempt to push through the descending resistance line toward the horizontal channel's high but if that failed (if there wasn't any real follow through on the retail traders' side after C.O. started pushing price) then we would see C.O. put in a large sell order and remove their support to put a spring into action. This would test the available supply. A drop down on low volume would suggest that the market is ready to move up. However, a drop down on high volume would suggest the need for more accumulation.
We saw relatively high volume on that drop, so the expectation is to see more accumulation before another move up now and that's what appears to be happening at this time on a much smaller scale. Price's current position lines up with the bottom of the ascending yellow channel. If this holds and price continues higher, then we can expect a conservative target of the upper grey box at around $8900, though we could potentially see price reaching the top of the channel a few hundred dollars higher. As always, price does not have to remain within the channel. A strong bullish push often sees an extension beyond the top of the channel.
We can see price has printed a descending channel as denoted by the green lines with a descending broadening wedge inside of it denoted by the dashed red lines, and is being supported at the bottom of the previously drawn orange box within our grey box. This is creating a potential Swing Failure Point (similar to the Wyckoff Spring) within the smaller descending broadening wedge denoted by the black lines. A successful SFP will see price closing above that swing low (which it has done twice now). This should see price then pushing upward once it pushes through the top of the orange box. The red box (order block) above price is resistance, but a successful breach of the top of that box should see price rising back toward $8300. The only caveat is the mitigation block in green. Failure of price to breach the top of this block will see it dropping toward the next block at $7400/$7500. HTF is bullish, so the expectation is for price to continue higher rather than lower right now. But even if we see that drop toward the next block below, the expectation remains that we will head higher as it is another strong area and each of these blocks are full of long orders that didn't get filled the last time around just waiting to go long, so they are sucking up all of the orders that drop into them. Our final block becomes the $6800 area. Ultimately, failure of that area to hold is not good news for the bulls and we should expect to see price fall further at that point.
In terms of accumulation, the recent large white candle could be seen as a spring. That means we could see price potentially drop back down toward the dashed line around $7850/60 to test the spring's result before getting serious about moving upward. That successful test of the spring should then see price pushing up toward that red box at the top of the accumulation zone. This would potentially create an IHS which is a good indicator of completed accumulation especially as all this is happening in a support zone. The target on that IHS would be the top of the green mitigation box. At that point, a successful push through it indicates that demand is outpacing supply and price will rise higher. RSI looks great on most times frames as it is near/at oversold and printing potential bullish divergence.
Bitcoin Analysis - Textbook Case of Wyckoff Downtrend to $4,800In my last chart, I had emphasized that the Wyckoff's Spring is likely at the $6,000 level (aka The Walls of Westeros) provided that price bounces from $6,000 and not any higher. Why is that? Well, it is important to remember that the Wyckoff's Spring needs to be a lower low.
Of course, this is all based on the assumption that Bitcoin is really trending according to the Wyckoff Events. If that is truly the case, then the current downtrend should also follow other Wyckoff rules that govern a Wyckoff Bear Cycle like distribution, breakdown and markdown.
Out of curiosity, I created the above chart with all those rules applied and it turned out exactly like what a textbook Wyckoff Downtrend chart would look like. Here is a link for you to compare it:
d.stockcharts.com
You can understand more about Wyckoff Market Analysis here:
stockcharts.com
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