hard · Volume Spread Analysis

Following a spring and mark-up, the practitioner observes a 'no demand' bar at the upper trend line of a channel.

If the background shows strong accumulation, how does this change the interpretation compared to 'no demand' after distribution?

  1. In a strong background, no demand may only be a temporary pause or a 'lull' in professional activity, and should not be used as a short signal without an upthrust.
  2. No demand is a universal reversal signal; its appearance at a trend line confirms that the bull move is over regardless of the background.
  3. The practitioner should double the position size because the low volume proves there is no selling pressure at the resistance level.
  4. The no-demand bar at the trend line is actually a 'test of supply' because it occurs on low volume during an uptrend.

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