Volume Spread Analysis Flashcards
1,000 Volume Spread Analysis flashcards, written to the same audited standard as KomFi's question banks: precise, decontextualized answers you can memorize verbatim — formulas rendered in real math notation, concepts deduplicated so every card earns its slot. Study them with progress tracking, got-it filtering, and cross-device resume.
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Sample card prompts
- What is the VSA interpretation of an up-bar with a wide spread, high (not excessive) volume, and a close in the upper third?
- What is the VSA interpretation of an up-bar with a wide spread, ultra-high volume, and a close in the middle or lower third?
- What is the VSA interpretation of an up-bar with a narrow spread and low volume?
- What is the VSA interpretation of a down-bar with a narrow spread, low volume, and a close in the middle or upper third?
- How is a price bar classified as an 'up-bar' in Volume Spread Analysis?
- In Volume Spread Analysis, what is the formula for calculating the Price Spread?
- What is the formula for calculating the 'Close Position' as a percentage?
- Why is a narrow spread on a high-volume up-day considered bearish?
- Why is a wide spread on an up-day with increasing volume considered bullish?
- In the context of Market-Maker behavior, what is the primary goal of a 'Weak Gap-Up' on good news?
- What is the purpose of a 'Strong Gap-Up' that bypasses an old resistance area?
- What are the two specific advantages Market-Makers hold over retail participants?
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