hard · Volume Price Analysis Volume Price Analysis

A commodity breaks down from a four-month range with a wide-spread decline on 2.6× average volume. Three sessions later, after a further 4% slide, a candle prints a narrow spread on 3.8× average volume, and the next two sessions drift sideways on shrinking volume.

What is the single biggest interpretive error a practitioner could make here?

  1. Reading the initial breakdown candle as a bearish Upthrust, confirming the range was really a distribution top.
  2. Mistaking the narrow-spread, high-volume candle for a completed reversal rather than early stopping action.
  3. Treating the narrow-spread candle as a classic No Demand bar despite its ultra-high volume reading here.
  4. Assuming the quiet sideways drift on shrinking volume is itself the Buying Climax, rather than a quieter aftermath.

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