MARKET PROFILE🔸🔸🔸 1 - Back to the Roots: Learn the Theory, Improve Signal 🔸🔸🔸
Becoming a successful trader starts with building a strong foundation of knowledge. This foundation comes from time spent in the markets and real experience. While the basic idea is easy to understand, actually building this solid base takes effort and patience.
Trading experience, careful observation, focusing on what truly matters, and understanding basic technical principles are all key parts of this foundation. Patience and awareness also play a big role in making it stronger.
Without this foundation, it’s difficult to trade well over the long term. But when you have it, you can think more clearly, make better decisions, and trust your own judgment.
In today’s fast-paced markets, some traders try to skip this step, only to realize later how important it really is. The good news is, it’s never too late to start building this foundation—you just need to dedicate the time and be ready to put in the work.
If you grasp the lessons from these experiences, you’ll see that they apply directly to your own journey as a trader. Along the way, you might also discover fresh insights about how markets really work today.
🔸🔸🔸 2 - Peter Steidlmayer 🔸🔸🔸
Peter Steidlmayer is the creator of Market Profile, a powerful tool that traders today often use through Market Profile analysis. What makes his idea special is that it didn’t come only from books or classrooms — it was shaped by his life experiences growing up on a ranch in California.
From an early age, Peter learned important lessons about value and fairness from his father. On their family ranch, his father would only sell crops when the price was fair, aiming for a reasonable profit instead of chasing big gains. If prices were too low, he’d hold on to the grain rather than selling at a loss. When buying, whether groceries or used farm equipment, his father was careful not to overpay, always seeking a fair deal. This taught Peter that value is not just a price number — it’s a relationship between price, time, and need. Paying too much means time works against you; paying less means time is on your side.
Later in college, Peter took a statistics course where he learned about the bell curve—a way to find patterns in what might look like random data. This gave him the idea that market prices also have a “fair value” area, where most trading happens, and areas away from this center that create opportunities.
He combined this with the ideas of value investing from Graham and Dodd and the concept of the “minimum trend” by John Schultz, which measures the smallest meaningful price movements. By grouping these price movements, Peter saw that prices tend to cluster around a fair value zone, forming a bell curve shape. This became the foundation for Market Profile and later, Volume Profile.
🔸🔸🔸 3 - Market Profile 🔸🔸🔸
Before we dive into Market Profile, it’s important to understand Peter Steidlmayer’s journey and how he developed Market Profile.
Through his research and testing different systems, Peter noticed that although some methods worked at first, none gave consistent or reliable results over time. The most important insight he gained was that all these approaches tried to predict future market prices — something he came to believe is impossible.
Instead of guessing where prices might go, Peter focused on finding value , which he called fair value . The goal of Market Profile is not to provide buy or sell signals but to help traders find where the true value lies.
Market Profile is a tool, not a trading system. To use it effectively, you need to understand its core principles, not just memorize fixed rules. Unlike simple buy/sell systems that stop working when market conditions change, Market Profile helps you see those changes as they happen and adapt your strategy accordingly.
Remember, market decisions always require your own judgment. Market Profile cannot predict the future — no tool can — but it helps you understand what is happening right now, so you can make better trading decisions.
Before we move on to interpreting Market Profile, we will first look at three key steps that will help build a clear foundation
Market Profile Graph: How the profile is drawn and what it represents
Market Profile on TradingView: How you can access and use this tool on TradingView
Anatomy of a Market Profile: Explanation of the key components
Once we cover these basics, we’ll be ready to focus on interpreting Market Profile and applying it in trading decisions.
📌 3.1 - Market Profile Graph
If you understand the basic principles behind Market Profile, you will be able to recognize key patterns easily, without getting confused by changes in how they are displayed.
To make this clear, I will draw the Market Profile for the trading session between 9:00 and 15:00. This will help you see how time and price interact at different levels during that trading session.
3.1.1 - Understanding the Letters in a Market Profile Chart
In a Market Profile chart, each letter represents a 30-minute time period during the trading day. The sequence starts with the letter A for the first half-hour (9:00–9:30), then B for the next half-hour (9:30–10:00), and continues alphabetically until the market closes.
This way, the chart shows not only which prices were traded but also exactly when they were active during the day.
3.1.2 - A Period (9:00 – 9:30)
This price level is where we start placing the letter A to represent the first 30 minutes. The trading day opens at 2685, marked by an arrow on the left side of the profile. (Shape a).
Shortly after the open, the price rises to 2690 (Shape b), so we place the letter A at 2690. Then, the price falls to 2680 (Shape c), and we add the letter A down to that level as well.
Next, the price climbs again to 2690 before settling back to 2680 (Shape d), which becomes the final price of the first half-hour. We do not add another A where one already exists.
The closing price of this period, 2680, is marked with an arrow on the right side of the profile.
(Note: Price Movement Shape in the chart is drawn to illustrate how the price moved within this 30-minute period.)
3.1.3 - B Period (9:30 – 10:00)
The second half-hour opens at 2680, so we place the letter B—which represents this time period—at that price level. Since the first column already has the letter A, we place this B in the second column (Shape a).
Then, the price drops to 2670, and we add the letter B down to this level, always filling the leftmost empty column. This period closes at 2675 (Shape b).
The price falls further to 2665, which is where the second half-hour ends. The final price of this period, 2665, is marked with an arrow on the right side of the profile (Shape c).
(Note: Price Movement Shape in the chart is drawn to illustrate how the price moved within this 30-minute period.)
3.1.4 - Completing the Market Profile for the Day (10:00-15:00)
As the day progresses, we continue placing the letters in this way. During the third half-hour (10:00–10:30), the decline continues. The market moves between 2665 and 2620, closing this period at 2640.
If we assume the drawing process is now understood from these examples, we can move to the end of the day. Throughout the session, prices move between 2695 and 2620, closing the day at 2670. At this point, we have the complete Market Profile for the day.
When we compare this type of chart with a candlestick chart, we see that both show the same basic information. However, the purpose here is not to track the exact price movement, but to see the value area created during the day.
By focusing on the value area, we can see how price and time interact.
The more time the price spends at a certain level, the more trading volume builds there. The higher the volume, the more the market sees that price as value.
Price + Time = Value
📌 3.2 - Market Profile on TradingView
Before we explore the key components of a Market Profile chart, it’s important to know how to display it on TradingView. There are two main ways to do this—either by changing the chart type to TPO or by adding it through the Indicators menu.
1. Enable TPO View from Chart Type Menu
Click on the Candles button at the top of your chart.
Select Time Price Opportunity (TPO) from the list of chart types.
2. Add Market Profile via Indicators
Click the Indicators button on the toolbar.
Go to the Technicals section and scroll to Profiles.
Choose Time Price Opportunity or Session Time Price Opportunity depending on whether you want the profile for the whole chart or for individual sessions.
📌 3.3 - Anatomy of a Market Profile
Let’s first explore the main components of a Market Profile chart—TPOs, Initial Balance, Extremes, Range Extensions, Fair Value, Unfair High, Unfair Low, and Value Areas. In this section, we’ll not only define each of them but also show how they appear on the chart for better understanding.
Key Components of a Market Profile Chart
Visualizing Components on a TradingView TPO Chart
3.3.1 - Key Components of a Market Profile Chart
Detailed explanations of each element that forms the structure of a Market Profile.
TPOs (Time Price Opportunities)
Each letter on the Market Profile chart is called a TPO (Time Price Opportunity). A TPO represents a specific price traded during a specific time period, showing both when and at what level the market was active. The sequence begins with capital letters (A, B, C, …), and once these are used up, it continues with lowercase letters (a, b, c, …) to represent later time periods.
Initial Balance
The Initial Balance marks the price range established during the first two letter time periods, usually represented by the letters A and B. It shows where the market first found a trading range and is often indicated on the left side of the profile with a vertical line.
Note:
If the letter time period is set to 15 minutes, each letter represents 15 minutes of trading, so the Initial Balance covers only the first 30 minutes in Tradingview.
In TradingView, you can use the Initial Balance (IB) range feature to define the key price range at the start of the session. By default, it covers 2 letters (A and B), but if you prefer, you can adjust the range to 3, 4, 5, or more bars to suit your analysis.
Extremes
An extreme is the activity that occurs at the very top or bottom of a price range, represented by two or more single TPO prints standing alone. It forms when the market tests a price level, then quickly rejects it and moves away, showing that the opposite side (buyers or sellers) stepped in with strength.
Extremes appear when the market rejects prices at the top or bottom of the range, leaving behind either a buying tail(single prints at the bottom) or a selling tail (single prints at the top). Visually, the value area forms the main “body” of the profile, while extremes extend outward like “tails.”
Note:
An extreme cannot occur in the last time period of the day, since there is no following trade to confirm rejection.
Range Extension
A range extension happens when the price moves beyond the initial balance (A and B TPOs). This expansion happens because longer-term traders step in with enough volume to push prices higher or lower. An upside extension signals active buyers, while a downside extension signals active sellers. Range extensions help reveal the influence of longer-term participants and provide important context about the market’s directional bias.
Fair Value
In a Market Profile chart, the price level with the highest number of letters (TPOs) is called the fair value. This level often corresponds to the price with the highest traded volume. If the profile shows more than one fair value level, the one closest to the midpoint of the day’s trading range is selected.
Unfair High
The highest price level of a distribution where trading activity is low. It represents an “unfair” or advantageous selling area because prices moved too high for buyers to remain interested. This level often marks the top of the range.
Unfair Low
The lowest price level of a distribution where trading activity is low. It represents an “unfair” or advantageous buying area because prices moved too low for sellers to remain interested. This level often marks the bottom of the range.
Value Area
The price range where most trading activity occurs, usually about 70% of TPOs. It shows where the market accepts price as fair, with buyers and sellers actively rotating around this level. Prices above the value area are advantageous for the longer-term seller; prices below it are advantageous for the longer-term buyer. The calculation process is:
Start with the price level that has the highest volume.
If this alone doesn’t reach 70%, compare the total volume of the one price levels above with the one price levels below.
Add the larger of the one to your total.
Repeat this process until you reach about 70% of the day’s total volume.
3.3.2 - Visualizing Components on a TradingView TPO Chart
Demonstration of how these components look directly on TradingView using the TPO chart.
With the Expand Block feature, the Market Profile is shown as separate columns, where each letter is placed in its own block. This helps you clearly see which price levels were active in each 30-minute.
Shifting the letters into the empty left column serves a special purpose. Instead of focusing on the exact price movements, this view highlights the value area created during the session. It allows traders to see where the market spent the most time and built the strongest acceptance, rather than just tracking short-term fluctuations.
🔸🔸🔸 4 - Principles of Market Profile 🔸🔸🔸
Now that we have learned how to draw the profile and the key terms used, we can move on to how to read a Market Profile chart.
Market Profile is not a ready-made trading system—it is a tool designed to support your decision-making. To use it well, you need to understand the principles behind how it works. No matter how advanced a tool is, your trading decisions will always require your own judgment—Market Profile can’t replace that.
It also cannot predict the future—but then again, no one can. What it does do is give you a clear picture of the current market situation. By understanding what’s happening right now, you put yourself in a stronger position to make better, more informed decisions.
📌 4.1 - The Auction Framework
The Auction Framework explains how the market works like an auction, helping people buy and sell. When prices go up, more buyers are attracted, willing to pay higher prices. When prices go down, more sellers enter, ready to sell at lower prices.
The market moves like an auction in two main ways: first, it pushes prices higher until there are no more buyers willing to pay more. Then, it reverses and moves down until there are no more sellers willing to sell at lower prices.
In this way, the market constantly moves up and down, balancing buyers and sellers. When the upward movement ends, the downward movement begins, and this cycle keeps repeating.
Looking a bit closer, the market moves in one direction and “asks” the other side (buyers or sellers) to respond. When the opposite side responds enough to stop the current move, the market changes direction.
In short, the market is like a continuous auction, where prices rise and fall as buyers and sellers compete—until one side runs out of interest.
📌 4.2 - Negotiating Process
When the market moves in one direction, it creates boundaries for the price range. These boundaries are called the unfair low at the bottom and the unfair high at the top. They represent price levels where the market has gone too far — these are called excesses .
Once these limits are established, the market starts trading inside this range. It moves between the unfair low and unfair high to find a fair price , which we call value . In other words, the market negotiates within this range to settle on value.
If you pause the market at any moment, you will notice three important points:
Unfair low (the lowest excess)
Unfair high (the highest excess)
Value (somewhere in the middle)
These three points show how buyers and sellers negotiate prices in the market.
📌 4.3 - Time Frame
Markets are always shaped by two different forces: short-term traders and long-term traders. Both are active at the same time, but their goals are very different.
Short-term traders are focused on “fair price” for the day. When the market opens, price moves up and down as these traders search for a balance point where both buyers and sellers agree. If the open is inside the previous day’s range, short-term activity usually dominates. They don’t wait for the perfect deal—they just need a reasonable price to complete their trades quickly, like a business traveler who buys a ticket at the going rate without shopping around.
Long-term traders , on the other hand, are more strategic. They are not in a hurry to trade today. They wait for an advantageous price—something too high or too low compared to value. When they step in with enough volume, they can break the balance and extend the market range. This is how trends begin. You can think of them as a vacation traveler who has time to wait for the best discount fare.
Because long-term buyers see value at low prices and long-term sellers see value at high prices, they rarely meet in the middle. Instead, the market swings: rising to create opportunity for sellers, falling to create opportunity for buyers.
The result is a constant cycle: balance, imbalance, and back to balance. Day-to-day order flow is shaped by short-term traders, but big moves and directional trends come from long-term players. At the extremes—whether too high or too low—it’s always the long-term traders who take control.
📌 4.4 - Balance and Imbalanced
The market helps people buy and sell by moving repeatedly between states of imbalance and balance. This happens both within a single trading session and over longer-term trends.
When the market is balanced , buying and selling are roughly equal. This means the market has found an opposing force and is trading around a fair price where buyers and sellers agree.
When the market is imbalanced , either buying or selling dominates. The market moves up or down directionally, searching for the opposite reaction and a fair price to trade around.
In short:
A balanced market has found a fair price.
An imbalanced market is still looking for that fair price.
This is simply another way of stating the law of supply and demand: buyers want to buy, sellers want to sell, and the market is either in balance or trying to get there.
📌 4.5 - Day Timeframe Structure
The idea of day structure comes from how the market looks for a fair price where both buyers and sellers are willing to trade. If a price is unfair, trading will stop there, and the market will move until balance is found.
The first hour of trading sets the initial balance . This range is like the “base” of the day. A wide base is more stable, while a narrow base is weak and often leads to bigger moves later in the day. Just like the base of a lamp keeps it standing, a wide initial balance provides stability, while a narrow initial balance is easier to “knock over,” leading to bigger moves and range extensions.
When longer-term traders enter, they can break this balance. If they act small, the market moves only a little. If they act strong, the market can move far and leave signs, like tails on the profile. Tails show where longer-term traders rejected extreme prices.
By watching the initial balance and the activity of longer-term players, traders can recognize different day types . Each type gives clues about short-term trading opportunities and the market’s bigger direction.
The main balanced types are:
Normal Day
Neutral Day
The main imbalanced types are:
Normal Variation Day
Trend Day
4.5.1 - Normal Day
On a Normal Day , the market is in balance and longer-term traders have little influence. The Market Profile often looks like a classic bell curve , where most trading happens around a fair central price. At the extremes, prices are rejected—buyers stop above and sellers stop below—keeping the market balanced.
Key Characteristics:
The key sign of a Normal Day is the initial balance (first hour’s range), which usually makes up about 85% of the entire day’s range . In other words, the first hour often defines how the rest of the day will unfold.
If any range extension happens, it usually comes late in the session.
Dynamics:
In terms of volume, around 80% comes from short-term traders and only 20% from longer-term participants . Because long-term players are mostly inactive, the market doesn’t trend strongly and instead stays contained within the initial balance area.
4.5.2 - Neutral Day
A Neutral Day occurs when both long-term buyers and sellers are active, but neither side gains control. Their efforts cancel each other out, so price extends beyond the initial balance in both directions , then returns to balance.
Key Characteristics:
Range extensions above and below the initial balance.
Close near the middle of the day’s range.
Initial balance is moderate in size —not as wide as a Normal Day, not as narrow as a Trend Day.
Often shows symmetry : the upside and downside extensions are about equal.
In terms of volume, around 70% comes from short-term traders and only 30% from longer-term participants .
Dynamics:
Uncertainty dominates. Long-term traders test prices higher and lower, but without strong follow-through, their activity neutralizes. Short-term traders make up most of the volume, keeping the market contained. This indecision often leads to repeated neutral days , as neither side has enough conviction to drive a clear trend.
4.5.3 - Normal Variation Day
A Normal Variation Day happens when long-term traders play a more active role than on a Normal Day, usually making up 20–40% of the day’s activity.
Key Characteristics:
Their involvement leads to a clear day extension beyond the initial balance, often about twice the size of the first hour’s range.
The initial balance is not as wide as on a Normal Day, making it easier to break.
As the day develops, long-term traders enter with conviction and push price beyond the base (range extension).
Price may extend in one direction but eventually finds a new balance area.
Volume split: 60–80% short-term traders, 20–40% longer-term traders.
Dynamics:
Early trading looks balanced and controlled by short-term participants. Later, longer-term buyers or sellers step in more aggressively, causing the day’s range to expand. If the extension is small, their influence is limited.
4.5.4 - Trend Day
A Trend Day occurs when long-term traders dominate the market, pushing it strongly in one direction. Their influence creates maximum imbalance and range extension , often lasting from the open to the close.
Key Characteristics:
The close is usually near the day’s high or low (about 90–95% of the time).
Volume is split roughly 40% short-term traders and 60% long-term traders .
The profile shape is elongated and thin , unlike the balanced bell curve of a Normal Day.
Price moves in one-timeframe fashion : each period makes higher highs in an uptrend or lower lows in a downtrend, with little to no rotation.
Dynamics:
Trend Days often start with a narrow initial balance , quickly broken as long-term participants step in with strong conviction.
The move may be triggered by news, stop orders, or a strong shift in sentiment.
As the trend unfolds, new participants are drawn in, fueling continuous directional movement.
There are two types:
Standard Trend Day – one continuous directional move.
Double-Distribution Trend Day – an initial balance and pause, followed by a second strong directional push that creates a new distribution area.
📌 4.6 – Initiative and Responsive Activity
In Market Profile, it’s important to know whether longer-term traders are acting with initiative (pushing the market) or responding (reacting to prices that look too cheap or too expensive). You can figure this out by comparing the day’s action with the previous day’s value area.
Responsive Activity happens when traders behave in an expected way.
Buyers step in when prices drop below value (cheap).
Sellers step in when prices rise above value (expensive).
This behavior maintains balance and is typical in Normal or balanced days.
Example: price falls below yesterday’s value area → buyers enter → responsive buying.
Initiative Activity happens when traders behave in an unexpected way.
Buying takes place at or above value (where you’d normally expect selling).
Selling takes place at or below value (where you’d normally expect buying).
This shows strong conviction and usually drives imbalance or trend.
Example: price above yesterday’s value area continues to attract buyers → initiative buying.
Quick Rules (relative to the previous day’s value area):
Above value → Selling = responsive, Buying = initiative
Below value → Buying = responsive, Selling = initiative
Inside value → Both buying and selling are considered initiative , but weaker than outside activity.
Why it matters
Responsive action keeps the market balanced → often short-term focused.
Initiative action pushes the market to new areas of value → often starts trends.
In short, responsive moves are reactions to “fair or unfair” prices, while initiative moves show conviction to create new value levels.
🔸🔸🔸 5 - Strategy 🔸🔸🔸
Trading is never about finding a magic formula—it’s about reading the market and making decisions with context. Market Profile doesn’t give you fixed answers like “buy here, sell there.” Instead, it provides market-generated information that helps you recognize when conditions are shifting and when an opportunity has a higher probability of success.
Just like in teaching, if someone only looks for answers without understanding the reasoning, they miss the bigger lesson. In trading, the same is true: rules without context are dangerous. Market Profile teaches us how to think about the market, not just follow signals blindly.
That said, there are special situations in Market Profile where the structure itself points to a high-confidence setup. These are not guarantees, but they often create trades that “almost have to be taken,” provided the overall market context supports them.
Below are a few of the special strategies I’ll cover in detail. The goal is not to memorize fixed rules but to understand the logic behind them. By learning the reasoning, you’ll see why these setups matter and how to use them in practice with your Market Profile indicator.
3-1 Days
Neutral-Extreme Days
Spike
📌 5.1 - 3-1 Days
Among the special setups in Market Profile, the 3-1 Day is one of the most well-known. It signals a strong conviction from longer-term traders and often leads to reliable follow-through the next session.
Below is a practical, step-by-step guide you can follow when you spot a potential 3-1 Day. I give rules for identification, entry options (conservative → aggressive), stops, targets, trade management and failure signals. Keep it mechanical but always use judgement.
What is a 3-1 Day
A 3-1 Day occurs when three things line up in the same direction:
an initiative tail (single-print tail showing rejection at an extreme),
range extension beyond the Initial Balance, and
TPO distribution that favors the same direction.
When they align, longer-term players are showing conviction and follow-through is likely.
Step 1 - Identify & confirm the 3 signals
Confirm all three before trusting the set-up:
Initiative tail
• Look for single-print tail(s) at an extreme (top for selling tail, bottom for buying tail).
• The tail must be initiative, not just reactive — ideally it sits outside or within prior day value area and is followed by continued action in the same direction.
• A tail is valid only if price is rejected in at least one subsequent time period (i.e., it’s confirmed).
Range extension
• Price extends beyond the Initial Balance (A+B hour).
• The extension should be clear (not just a one-tick TPO). On many 3-1 examples extension is large and directional.
TPO count / profile bias
• The profile shows more TPOs on the extension side.
• TPOs favor the trend (more time/acceptance on the extension side).
Step 2 — Decide entry approaches
Conservative (recommended)
• Wait for the next day open to be within or better than the previous day’s value area (statistically highly probable after a 3-1).
• If next-day open confirms (opens in the trend direction or inside value but not against you), enter with a defined stop just beyond the tail/extreme.
• Advantage: extra confirmation, lower chance of false continuation.
Standard intraday (balanced)
• Enter after the tail + extension + TPO bias are visible and price pulls back to a logical support/resistance area:
• Buy: pullback into single-print area / inside single prints or into the upper edge of the prior value area.
• Sell: mirrored logic for downside.
• Place stop just beyond the tail extreme (a few ticks/pips beyond the single prints), or a tight structural stop below/above the retest.
Aggressive
• Enter as soon as price breaks out of the initial balance and shows range extension.
• Because this approach carries more risk of a false breakout, you should use the smallest position size and the tightest stop. If the breakout continues, you capture the move early and maximize reward. If it fails, your loss is limited because of the tight stop and small size.
📌 5.2 - Neutral-Extreme Day
A Neutral-Extreme Day starts as a neutral day (range extensions both above and below the Initial Balance) but closes near one extreme . That close signals a short-term “victor” among longer-term participants and gives a high-probability bias into the next session.
Neutral-Extreme Days are powerful because they combine both-sided testing (neutrality) with a clear winning side at the close. That winner often carries conviction into the next session — but always use proper stops and watch for early failure signs. Treat the setup as a probability edge, not a certainty.
Step 1 - Identify the Neutral-Extreme Day
Confirm the day was neutral : range extensions occurred both above and below the IB during the session.
Check the close : it is near the day’s high (neutral→high close) or near the day’s low (neutral→low close).
Note:
The close near an extreme indicates one side “won” the day and increased conviction.
Step 2 - Decide entry approaches
Conservative (recommended)
• Wait for the next days' open.
• If price of following days' opens
above the Neutral Day’s Value Area and the Neutral Day closed near the high => Long
below the Neutral Day’s Value Area and the Neutral Day closed near the low => Short
• Place stop just beyond the opposite edge of the previous day’s VA or slightly beyond today’s extreme.
Standard intraday (balanced)
• Wait for the next day’s first 30–90 minutes
• If price above the Neutral Day’s VA(or below the Neutral Day’s VA for short)
• Enter during the next day when early initiative activity confirms continuation
• Place stop just beyond the opposite edge of the Neutral day’s VA
Aggressive
• Enter at close of the Neutral-Extreme day, expecting continuation
• Use small size and a tight stop because overnight/new-session risk exists.
Example - 1
Example - 2
📌 5.3 - Spike
A spike is a fast, a few time periods move away from Value Area of trading session. Because it happens near the close, the market has not had time to “prove” the new levels (Price + Time = Value). The next session’s open and early activity tell you whether the spike will be accepted (continuation) or rejected (reversion).
1 - How to identify a spike
A spike starts with the period that breaks out of the day’s value area (the breakout period).
The spike range is from the breakout period’s extreme to the day’s extreme in the spike direction.
It is typically a quick, directional move in the last few time periods of the session.
2 - Acceptance vs Rejection - what to watch for next day
Because the move happened late, you must wait until the next trading day to judge follow-through. Early next-day activity shows whether value forms at the spike levels (acceptance) or not (rejection).
Accepted spike (continuation):
Next day opens beyond the spike (above a buying spike, below a selling spike), or
Next day opens inside the spike and then builds value there (TPOs/volume accumulate inside the spike).
Both cases mean the market accepts the new levels and continuation in the spike direction is likely.
Rejected spike (failure):
Next day opens opposite the spike (below a buying spike or above a selling spike) and moves away.
This indicates the probe failed and price will likely move back toward prior value.
3 - Spike Reference Points
Openings within the spike:
If next day opens inside the spike range → day is likely to balance around the spike.
Expect two-timeframe rotational trade (sideways activity) within or near the spike.
Treat the spike as a short-term new base : use the spike range (top-to-bottom of spike) as an estimate for that day’s range potential.
Openings outside the spike:
Open above a buying spike: very bullish - initiative buyers in control.
Trade idea: look to buy near the top of the spike (spike top becomes support).
Caution: if price later auctions back into the spike and breaks the spike top, the support may fail quickly.
Open below a selling spike: very bearish — initiative sellers in control.
Trade idea: look to short near the bottom of the spike (spike bottom becomes resistance).
Open above a selling spike (rejecting the spike): bullish day-timeframe signal, often leads to rotations supported by the spike top as support.
Open below a buying spike (rejecting the spike): bearish.
4 - Decide entry approaches
Conservative (recommended)
• Wait for next-day open and confirmation (open beyond spike or open inside then build value inside spike).
• Enter on a pullback toward the spike extreme (top for long, bottom for short).
• Place stop just beyond the opposite spike extreme.
Standard intraday (balanced)
• Enter at the open if it is above/below the spike in the spike direction.
• Use tight size and tight stop (higher risk / higher reward).
Aggressive
• Enter when early session shows initiative in spike direction (strong TPO/volume buildup).
• Stop under/above the spike extreme or an early structural swing.
🔸🔸🔸 6 - Conclusion 🔸🔸🔸
Becoming a proficient trader is much like designing with wood. At first, you study the fundamentals—understanding different types of wood, their strengths, how they react under load, and how joints transfer forces. Then you begin by following standard rules and templates, carefully measuring and cutting according to the book. Along the way, the tools you use—whether it’s a simple saw or advanced CNC machines—shape the quality of your work. Without the right tools, even solid knowledge can fall short. With practice, however, you learn not only how to apply the theory but also how to make the most of your tools, combining both into a process that feels natural and efficient. Eventually, you stop focusing on each detail step by step and instead feel how to create a structure that is both strong and elegant. Trading develops in the same way—starting from theory, moving through repetition, and finally reaching intuitive proficiency.
Success in trading is not about memorizing every pattern but about combining three essential elements: Theory + Your Judgment + Tools = Results . Theory provides the foundation, judgment comes from experience and self-awareness, and tools like TradingView allow you to test, visualize, and refine your edge. Together, these elements build the confidence to act decisively in live markets.
The strategies we explored—such as 3-1 Days, Neutral-Extreme Days, and Spikes —are valuable examples of how Market Profile structure can highlight high-probability opportunities. But now that you understand how profiles are built and the principles behind them, you are equipped to create and test your own strategies. Developing a personal approach not only strengthens your decision-making, it also raises your confidence level—one of the most important skills a trader can have.
In the end, Market Profile is not about rigid answers but about learning to think in market terms. Once theory and experience merge into intuition, opportunity becomes something you recognize instinctively—just as a fluent speaker understands meaning without translation. That is the essence of proficiency: not just knowing the rules, but mastering the ability to trade with clarity and conviction.
🔸🔸🔸 7 – Resources 🔸🔸🔸
If you’d like to deepen your knowledge of Market Profile and its applications, the following books are highly recommended:
A Six-Part Study Guide to Market Profile – CBOT
A clear and structured guide that introduces Market Profile theory step by step, making it accessible for both beginners and intermediate traders.
Steidlmayer on Markets: Trading with Market Profile – J. Peter Steidlmayer, Steven B. Hawkins
Written by the creator of Market Profile, this book lays out the foundational concepts and demonstrates how profiles reveal the auction process behind price movement.
Markets in Profile: Profiting from the Auction Process – James F. Dalton, Eric T. Jones, Robert B. Dalton
A modern exploration of how the auction process applies to today’s markets, combining Market Profile concepts with behavioral finance and practical strategy.
Mind Over Markets: Power Trading with Market Generated Information – James F. Dalton, Eric T. Jones, Robert B. Dalton
Considered a classic, this book provides a comprehensive framework for understanding and applying Market Profile. It bridges theory with practical trading insights, making it a must-read for serious traders.
1AAPL trade ideas
APPLE made first 1D Golden Cross in over a year!Apple Inc. (AAPL) completed this week its first 1D Golden Cross in over 1 year (since June 13 2024). The price has posted a strong 1D candle today on positive iPhone 17 fundamentals and it appears that the price is extending the very same Channel Up it had in May - July 2024.
If the current pattern ends the same way eventually as the 2024 fractal, expect a +44.64% rise with a $290.00 Target.
However the rally may stop a little lower at $273.00 if it follows the previous +20.80% Bullish Leg of the more recent June 18 - August 13 2025 run.
We will be more than satisfied with the less optimistic scenario nonetheless.
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💸💸💸💸💸💸
👇 👇 👇 👇 👇 👇
APPLE Set To Fall! SELL!
My dear friends,
APPLE looks like it will make a good move, and here are the details:
The market is trading on 234.05 pivot level.
Bias - Bearish
Technical Indicators: Supper Trend generates a clear short signal while Pivot Point HL is currently determining the overall Bearish trend of the market.
Goal - 230.63
Recommended Stop Loss - 236.05
About Used Indicators:
Pivot points are a great way to identify areas of support and resistance, but they work best when combined with other kinds of technical analysis
Disclosure: I am part of Trade Nation's Influencer program and receive a monthly fee for using their TradingView charts in my analysis.
———————————
WISH YOU ALL LUCK
AAPL Watching Key Triangle Break — Trade Levels for September 15
* Macro backdrop: U.S. futures are mixed after last week’s rally, with no major overnight catalysts. Tech remains the driver, but profit-taking is possible after recent gains.
* Sector tone: Large-cap tech is still attracting flows, though traders are selective. Apple is rebounding from a recent sharp drop.
Technical Analysis – AAPL
Trend & Structure (1-Hour Chart)
* Price is forming a symmetrical triangle after bouncing from $226 lows.
* The triangle’s apex is near mid-week, suggesting an imminent breakout.
Key Levels
* Resistance: $235.8 (near-term breakout point), $238.7 (3rd Call Wall), $241.3 (Gamma Wall / major resistance).
* Support: $230.0 (short-term pivot), $227.5 (interim), $225.9 (major support).
Momentum & Indicators
* MACD on 1H is bullish and climbing.
* Stoch RSI is high but not yet diverging—watch for cooling before a move.
* Volume is improving on upward tests, signaling accumulation.
Options/GEX Insight
* Highest positive NETGEX and Call resistance sit near $241.3, aligning with chart resistance.
* IVR 13.1 and IVx avg 25.4 indicate modest volatility and room for expansion if a breakout occurs.
Trade Scenarios for Sept 15
* Bullish Plan:
* Entry: Break and hold above $235.8.
* Targets: $238.7 → $241.3.
* Stop: Below $230.0.
* Bearish/defensive (if triangle breaks down):
* Entry: Break below $230.0.
* Targets: $227.5 → $225.9.
* Stop: Above $235.8.
Summary
Apple enters Monday inside a tightening triangle. A breakout above $235.8 may target $238.7–241.3, while a breakdown below $230 could pull price back to the mid-$220s.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research and manage risk before trading.
AAPL at Dynamic Support: Trade the Bounce!🍎 AAPL Swing/Day Trade: The Great Apple Heist Plan 🚨
Asset: AAPL (Apple Inc. Stock)
Market: US Stock
MarketVibe: Bullish, sneaky, and ready to loot some profits! 💰
📜 The Master Plan: Bullish EMA Pullback Heist
🎯 Strategy: We're pulling off a slick Double Exponential Moving Average (DEMA) pullback plan, targeting a breakout at dynamic support levels. Think of it as a high-stakes caper where we sneak in, grab the profits, and escape before the market knows what hit it! 😎
🔑 Key Setup Details:
Chart Setup: AAPL is showing a bullish setup with a DEMA pullback, signaling a potential swing or day trade opportunity.
Dynamic Line: We’re eyeing the DEMA as our guiding star 🌟 for entries and exits.
🚪 Entry: The Sneaky Thief Layering Strategy
🔍 How to Enter: Deploy the Thief Layering Strategy with multiple buy limit orders to maximize your entry precision:
🤑 Buy Limit Layers: Place orders at $227, $228, $229, $230 (or add more layers based on your risk appetite — you’re the mastermind here!).
💡 Pro Tip: Feel free to adjust entry levels to suit your style. The market’s your playground, so pick your spot!
🛑 Stop Loss: Protect Your Loot!
⚠️ Thief SL: Set your stop loss at $224 post-breakout to guard your stash.
Note: Dear Ladies & Gentlemen (Thief OGs 🕵️♂️), this SL is a suggestion. Adjust it based on your strategy and risk tolerance. You’re in charge of your heist, so protect your loot your way!
🎯 Target: Hit the Jackpot & Escape!
💥 Profit Target: Aim for $248, where a high-voltage resistance wall ⚡️ awaits, potentially paired with overbought conditions and a sneaky trap. Grab your profits and vanish before the market catches on!
Note: Dear Thief OGs, this target is a suggestion. Set your TP based on your goals and risk management. Take the money and run at your own discretion! 😏
👀 Related Pairs to Watch (Correlations & Opportunities)
To boost your heist, keep an eye on these correlated assets:
NASDAQ:MSFT (Microsoft): Tech giant with similar market moves to AAPL. If AAPL’s bullish, MSFT might follow suit. Watch for parallel DEMA pullbacks.
NASDAQ:QQQ (Invesco QQQ ETF): Tracks the Nasdaq-100, where AAPL is a heavy hitter. QQQ’s trend can confirm AAPL’s bullish momentum.
AMEX:SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF): Broad market index. If SPY’s trending up, it supports AAPL’s bullish case.
Key Correlation Insight: AAPL often moves in tandem with tech-heavy indices like QQQ. A bullish QQQ or MSFT can reinforce confidence in this trade setup.
⚡ Why This Setup Rock
Bullish Momentum: DEMA pullback signals a strong continuation pattern.
Layered Entries: Multiple limit orders reduce risk and increase flexibility.
Clear Risk Management: Defined SL and TP keep your heist disciplined.
Market Context: Tech sector strength (check QQQ/MSFT) supports AAPL’s upward move.
⚠️ Risk Disclaimer
Dear Thief OGs, this is not financial advice. The market’s a wild place, and you’re the master of your trades. Set your SL and TP based on your own risk tolerance and strategy. Steal profits wisely! 😎
✨ “If you find value in my analysis, a 👍 and 🚀 boost is much appreciated — it helps me share more setups with the community!”
#Hashtags: #AAPL #SwingTrading #DayTrading #StockMarket #ThiefStrategy #TechnicalAnalysis #Bullish #TradingView
AAPL Eyes $300—Bullish Breakout in PlayAAPL Eyes $300—Bullish Breakout in Play
AAPL could reach $300 in the coming months.
Since our last update, the stock has climbed nearly 20%, rising from $200 to $240.
It recently broke out of a small triangle pattern, showing strong bullish momentum. This breakout suggests the rally may continue.
My key upside targets are: $257.50, $270, $280, and eventually $300.
Watch the full analysis for more insights.
Thank you!
APPLE Massive Short! SELL!
My dear friends,
Please, find my technical outlook for APPLE below:
The price is coiling around a solid key level - 239.67
Bias - Bearish
Technical Indicators: Pivot Points High anticipates a potential price reversal.
Super trend shows a clear sell, giving a perfect indicators' convergence.
Goal - 234.66
About Used Indicators:
The pivot point itself is simply the average of the high, low and closing prices from the previous trading day.
Disclosure: I am part of Trade Nation's Influencer program and receive a monthly fee for using their TradingView charts in my analysis.
———————————
WISH YOU ALL LUCK
Apple: Pulling Back, but Uptrend Still IntactApple has recently faced substantial downward pressure, retracing enough to erase the gains made in the first week of September. Our primary outlook is that the stock will soon rebound and, during green wave , rise toward resistance at $260.10. Following a moderate pullback in wave , shares should ultimately break through this level in wave , further advancing the broader upward trend. However, we continue to monitor our 37% likely alternative scenario. In this case, AAPL would have completed beige wave alt.b with its recent peak and could next target a new major low for blue wave alt.(IV) via wave alt.c . Here, the price would fall below support at $201.50 but ideally rebound above the lower mark at $168.
AAPL – Pullback Setup After Keynote-Induced DipMy original post was hidden due to a house rule violation, but I’m sharing the setup again here:
Apple’s stock dropped heavily after the recent iPhone 17 / iPhone Air keynote, landing on a key support level that previously aligned with an upside break of structure.
This sharp decline appears to have started an Elliott 5-wave move. Wave 3 has already completed, and I’m now speculating for Wave 4 to develop — which could complete a tight 0.5R setup.
Confluences:
• RSI and MACD both showing divergences at support
• Stochastic oversold, also printing divergence
• Structure remains intact, likely aiming for a retest of the above resistance area
For this setup, a 1 ATR target protected by a 2 ATR stop loss on the 1H timeframe should be enough.
Disclaimer: This idea is for educational purposes only. Please do not place trades solely based on this setup.
AAPL LongOn AAPL (15m), the broader market structure has shifted bearish after multiple CHoCH signals near 239–238 and a decisive Break of Structure (BOS) around 236, which confirms sellers have taken control following the rejection from the recent swing high at 241.02. The rapid downside move into the current session suggests continuation pressure, but a short-term corrective rally remains possible if demand levels hold.
The supply zones between 233–239 look strong, as price repeatedly failed to hold above them and sold off sharply each time, showing clear seller dominance. The stacked demand levels below 227 down to 220 are important to watch: buyers previously stepped in with strength here, creating impulsive rallies, but their ability to defend these zones again will determine whether a deeper recovery can take place.
Price is now trading at 227.91, extending a sharp leg lower into nearby demand. The marked projection suggests price may attempt a bounce from this area, targeting a corrective move back toward 233–238 supply. If buyers manage to defend current lows and create a bullish reaction, a retracement into those red zones is likely. However, failure to hold above 226.90 would expose lower demand layers toward 224–222.
The current trade bias is bearish, but near-term expectation is for a corrective bullish retracement into supply before sellers look to re-engage. The outlook would be invalidated if price breaks and closes decisively above 239, as that would flip structure back in favor of buyers. Momentum currently favors sellers given the sharp downside drive, but any slowing of bearish candles at demand or the appearance of strong bullish engulfing patterns would support a corrective move higher.
AAPL 4Hour Time frame📊 Apple (AAPL) Snapshot
Current Price: ~$234.35
Day Range: $233.01 – $238.66
Open Price: ~$236.73
Market Cap: ~$3.0 Trillion
P/E Ratio: ~30.3
EPS: ~6.59
🔎 Pivot Levels (Daily Basis → useful for 4H)
Pivot Point: ~$234.6
Resistance:
R1: ~$235.9
R2: ~$238.0
R3: ~$239.2
Support:
S1: ~$232.5
S2: ~$231.3
S3: ~$229.1
📉 Technical Indicators (4-Hour Insight)
RSI: ~40 → weak, leaning bearish.
MACD: Negative → bearish momentum.
Moving Averages: Short-term averages show Sell, long-term still supportive (Buy).
📌 4-Hour Frame Outlook
Momentum: Neutral-to-bearish; price is consolidating around the pivot zone ($234–235).
Bullish Scenario: If AAPL breaks above $238, short-term upside could open toward $239+.
Bearish Scenario: If price slips below $232, risk increases for a move toward $230.
✅ Conclusion: On the 4-hour chart, Apple is in a neutral to bearish phase, with weak momentum. Bulls need a breakout above $238 to take control, while bears may dominate if it breaks under $232.
Apple Shares (AAPL) Fall After iPhone 17 LaunchApple Shares (AAPL) Fall After iPhone 17 Launch
Yesterday, Apple unveiled its new products, including the iPhone 17. The new model features a sleeker form factor, an improved display and battery, and a new processor. However, analysts believe the model lacks the breakthrough impact needed to drive the stock higher.
The charts confirm this: while the main stock indices rose yesterday, AAPL shares fell by around 1.5%.
Technical Analysis of Apple Shares (AAPL)
When analysing the chart six days ago, we:
→ confirmed the upward channel (shown in blue);
→ highlighted the $235 support level;
→ suggested that while AAPL stock could maintain upward momentum, disappointment over the new product launch might trigger a correction.
In addition to the AAPL price action we noted earlier, several bearish signals on the hourly chart support the correction scenario:
→ a long upper shadow (marked with an arrow);
→ aggressive price action when breaking the $235 support;
→ bearish divergences on the RSI indicator.
Bulls might find support at line S, which is part of a fan drawn from the starting point of the bullish impulse on 6 August.
However, if bearish sentiment persists, price action could unfold within the structure shown in red (potentially a bull flag pattern inside the prevailing bullish trend). Bearish pressure could aim to push AAPL shares down towards the median of the red channel.
In that case, bulls may find support in the area where several lines converge:
→ the lower rays of the fan (shown in orange);
→ the psychological $230 level (which has repeatedly switched roles between resistance and support since August);
→ the median of the blue channel;
→ the lower boundary of the bullish gap from 2 September.
This article represents the opinion of the Companies operating under the FXOpen brand only. It is not to be construed as an offer, solicitation, or recommendation with respect to products and services provided by the Companies operating under the FXOpen brand, nor is it to be considered financial advice.
Apple – Can the Company’s “Awe Dropping” Event Deliver?The Apple share price has been on a roll of late, trading from a low of 224 on August 21st to print a 6 month high of 241 on Friday (Sept 5th), consolidating its position as the third biggest company in the world with a market capitalisation of $3.56 trillion, just behind Microsoft in second place at $3.68 trillion.
However, what happens next for the Apple share price may depend in part on how well traders respond to the company’s biggest product launch of 2025, which is due for release at its “Awe Dropping” event later today.
Apple are due to showcase their next generation iPhone line up, alongside new smartwatches, and other devices. This hardware is seen as important for the future success of the company given Apple has fallen behind its key competitors in the AI space and so needs customers to keep buying these products while it revitalises its plans to catch up.
The Apple Event kicks off at 1800 BST. It could be helpful for traders to monitor the product announcements and keep focused on any impact they have on price action for Apple stock throughout the evening and early trading on Wednesday.
The share price could experience pockets of volatility across this crucial 24 hour period before traders switch their focus to the US inflation releases that are scheduled for 1330 BST Wednesday (PPI) and 1330 BST Thursday (CPI).
Technical Update: Optimism Ahead of the Product Launch?
It might be argued the current price of Apple shares reflects positive investor sentiment ahead of today’s product launch.
Since the April 8th low, traders have consistently bought into price dips, pushing the stock above resistance marked by the previous failure high.
As the chart above shows, improving sentiment has helped form an uptrend in price, with Friday marking the highest trade in Apple shares since March 7th.
While the positive trend is encouraging, it is no guarantee of continued price strength, and much will depend on how the market reacts to this evening’s key sentiment driver.
That said, a close above the 241 high could trigger a further phase of strength toward higher resistance levels.
A successful close above 241 might signal a push toward resistance at 250, which is the February 25th high, or even 260, which is the December 26th peak.
However, if the market reacts negatively to the product launch, breaking key support levels might be an indication for risks of further price declines in Apple’s share price.
As shown in the chart above, the rising Bollinger mid-average, currently at 232, may offer initial support. Last week's decline held at this level, helping to establish fresh buying interest and the latest move to new recovery highs.
As such, the 232 level may serve as the first possible support, with a close below it signalling potential for increased downside risks.
A close below 232 could potentially trigger a deeper decline toward 224, the August 21st low, or even 202, the August monthly downside extreme.
The material provided here has not been prepared accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Whilst it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research, we will not seek to take any advantage before providing it to our clients.
Pepperstone doesn’t represent that the material provided here is accurate, current or complete, and therefore shouldn’t be relied upon as such. The information, whether from a third party or not, isn’t to be considered as a recommendation; or an offer to buy or sell; or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security, financial product or instrument; or to participate in any particular trading strategy. It does not take into account readers’ financial situation or investment objectives. We advise any readers of this content to seek their own advice. Without the approval of Pepperstone, reproduction or redistribution of this information isn’t permitted.
AAPL Market Preview for Monday, September 8Price Action & Market Structure
* AAPL is trading around 239.8, consolidating after multiple rejections near 240.5–241.3.
* Price is still within a rising channel, but short-term momentum is softening.
* Structure remains constructive as long as price holds 239–238.5 support.
Key Levels
* Resistance (Upside Caps):
* 240.6–241.3 → Immediate resistance.
* 245.0 → 2nd Call Wall resistance.
* 247.5–250 → Heavy Gamma resistance zone.
* Support (Downside Floors):
* 239.0 → Key intraday support.
* 238.0–238.5 → Secondary support buffer.
* 232.5–227.5 → HVL + Put Support anchor.
Options Sentiment (GEX & IV)
* GEX: Tilted slightly bullish, with Calls outweighing Puts.
* IVR: Low at 11.6, showing options are pricing muted moves.
* Gamma Walls:
* 245–250 = Strong upside cap.
* 232.5–227.5 = Strong downside support zone.
Indicators
* MACD (15m): Slight bearish momentum showing, indicating short-term consolidation.
* Stoch RSI: Resetting near oversold, which could allow another push higher if buyers step in.
Scenarios for Today
Bullish Case (if 239 holds):
* Hold above 239.0, push through 240.6–241.3.
* Targets → 243.0 → 245.0, with possible extension to 247.5–250 Gamma Wall.
Bearish Case (if 239 breaks):
* Lose 239.0, test 238.0–238.5.
* If weakness accelerates, deeper pullback toward 235.0 → 232.5 HVL zone.
Trading Thoughts
* Longs: Favor dip entries near 239.0–238.5 with bounce confirmation, targeting 241–243.
* Shorts: Fade rejection at 241–243, stops above 244.5.
* Stops:
* Longs → below 238.0.
* Shorts → above 244.5.
Summary
AAPL sits at a pivotal 239–240 zone. Holding this support opens upside to 243–245, with Gamma resistance capping higher at 247.5–250. If 239 fails, expect a quick dip into 238–235, with stronger support at 232.5–227.5. Low IVR suggests controlled moves, but GEX positioning favors mild bullish bias unless support breaks.
⚠️ This analysis is for educational purposes only and not financial advice. Always manage risk properly.
APPL Breakout Play: Ride Momentum w/ $250 Calls
# 🚀 APPL Swing Trade Setup (2025-09-07)
**Bias:** 🔥 Bullish (multi-timeframe momentum confirmed)
**Conviction:** ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (75%)
### 📊 Key Takeaways
* ✅ Daily RSI = 73.3 → strong momentum
* ✅ Multi-timeframe alignment → bullish trend continuation
* ⚠️ Volume = \~1.0x avg → breakout needs confirmation
* ⚖️ Options flow = neutral (C/P \~1.0) → no big institutional push
* 🌐 VIX \~15 → low vol = cheap calls
---
### 🎯 Trade Plan
* **Instrument:** \$APPL
* **Direction:** CALL (single-leg)
* **Strike:** \$250
* **Expiry:** 2025-09-19
* **Entry Price:** 0.78 (ask)
* **Profit Target:** 1.56 (≈100% gain)
* **Stop Loss:** 0.47 (\~40% risk)
* **Size:** 1 contract (adjust to 2% account risk)
* **Entry Timing:** Open (or breakout > \$241.5 + volume)
---
### 🧠 Rationale
* \$250 strike = liquid (OI 36k+) & balanced delta/liquidity
* Low VIX keeps theta drag manageable (12 DTE)
* Upside continuation likely toward \$246–\$250 zone
* Defined risk/reward w/ simple naked call
---
### ⚠️ Risks
* ❌ Failed breakout → fast premium decay
* ⏳ Time decay accelerates after 7–8 DTE
* 📰 Macro/news shocks = whipsaw risk
---
## 📌 TRADE DETAILS (JSON)
```json
{
"instrument": "APPL",
"direction": "call",
"strike": 250.0,
"expiry": "2025-09-19",
"confidence": 0.75,
"profit_target": 1.56,
"stop_loss": 0.47,
"size": 1,
"entry_price": 0.78,
"entry_timing": "open",
"signal_publish_time": "2025-09-07 13:19:26 EDT"
}
```
APPLE: Will Start Falling! Here is Why:
The price of APPLE will most likely collapse soon enough, due to the supply beginning to exceed demand which we can see by looking at the chart of the pair.
Disclosure: I am part of Trade Nation's Influencer program and receive a monthly fee for using their TradingView charts in my analysis.
❤️ Please, support our work with like & comment! ❤️
AAPL Holding Uptrend – Sept 18 Trade Setup🍏 Here’s my latest desk-style breakdown for Apple heading into Wednesday, built from the 1-hour chart and GEX option data.
1️⃣ Price Action & Market Structure
* Steady climb: AAPL continues to respect its rising trendline from last week. After a mild intraday pullback, price is back around $239.6 and hugging the 9 EMA.
* Key pivot zone: $238–239 is the near-term battleground. Holding this keeps the higher-low pattern alive.
* Next resistance: $241.1 (recent high) is the level to beat for a fresh push toward $242.5–245.
2️⃣ GEX (Options Flow) Check
* Call wall magnets: Strong gamma build-ups at $242.5 and $245 can act like upside magnets once $241.1 is taken out.
* Put support: First meaningful put walls lie much lower at $217.5 and $212.5, giving AAPL room to breathe if there’s a dip.
* Low IVR: IVR sits near 12.6 with IVx around 26.1—option premiums are relatively cheap.
3️⃣ Trading Thoughts
* Bullish play: Enter on a confirmed hourly close over $241.1. First target $242.5, stretch to $245. Protective stop under $238.
* Bearish hedge: Only consider a short if AAPL loses $238 on volume. Next downside pocket sits around $235–233.
4️⃣ Option Angles
* Upside: Cheap call spreads like 240/245 offer a defined-risk way to play the breakout.
* Neutral income: Selling puts below $220 makes sense if you expect Apple to keep grinding higher or stay range-bound.
5️⃣ My View
Apple’s chart remains constructive. As long as it keeps closing above $238 on the hourly, dips are buyable. A clean breakout over $241 could invite momentum buyers quickly.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for educational discussion only and is not financial advice. Always do your own research and manage risk before trading.
AAPL: Building a Base at 238 – Swing & Scalp Setups for Sept 17 1-Hour Chart Technical View
Apple’s 1-hour chart shows a constructive rebound from the early September selloff. After reclaiming the $236.7–$238.2 zone, price is consolidating beneath $241.3. MACD has eased back toward neutral and Stoch RSI is mid-range, indicating digestion after the recent pop.
* Immediate Support: $237.9–$238.2 (short-term breakout retest)
* Major Support: $236.7 (trend-defining pivot)
* Upside Zone: $241.3–$243.8 is the next key resistance band; a breakout above could open $245–$250
9 EMA remains above the 21 EMA, keeping the micro-trend bullish as long as $236.7 holds.
GEX & Options Flow
Options positioning supports the idea of a slow upward bias:
* Call Walls: $241.3 (highest positive NET GEX / call resistance), $242.5, and $245.
* Put Support: $217.5 is the main deep downside hedge.
* GEX Bias: Modest call concentration at ~6.7% with IVR ~14 (IVx ~26.5), showing lower option demand and relatively quiet volatility pricing.
This suggests market makers are not pricing in a major move but will likely support dips near $236–$238.
Trade Thoughts & Suggestions
* Swing Idea: Enter on dips into $238 with a stop below $236.5, aiming for $241.3–$243.8 and possibly $245–$250 if momentum improves.
* Scalp Idea: Buy quick pullbacks to $238 or play a clean breakout above $241.3 with volume confirmation.
* Bearish Scenario: A decisive break under $236.5 could test $232 and lower.
Quick Take
AAPL is building a steady base just under $241. For Sept 17, holding $238 keeps the bull case intact with $241–$245 as the upside zone to watch.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research and manage risk before trading.
AAPL trade plan on 9/15/25Trade Plan: AAPL (1H + 4H Inside Bars)
🔹 Context
Current price stuck between 1hr/6hr inside bar high (≈234.4) and inside bar low (≈233.5).
Multiple inside bars → compression → expect breakout soon.
Targets (TP1/TP2) are pre-marked above and below.
✅ Entry Triggers
Long Entry:
Buy above 234.5 (clear break of 1H & 4H inside high).
Confirmation: candle closes above 234.5 on 1H timeframe.
Short Entry:
Sell below 233.5 (break of 1H & 4H inside low).
Confirmation: candle closes below 233.5 on 1H timeframe.
🛑 Stop Loss (S/L)
For Longs: just below inside bar low → 233.2.
For Shorts: just above inside bar high → 234.7.
👉 Keeps S/L tight, clear invalidation.
🎯 Take-Profit (TP)
Upside Targets:
TP1 = 236.0
TP2 = 237.6
Downside Targets:
TP1 = 231.9
TP2 = 230.6
🚫 No-Trade Zone
Between 233.5 – 234.5 (the inside bar range).
This is chop city → no edge.
Wait for break + close outside this zone before entering.
⚖️ Risk-Reward
Entry at 234.5 → Stop at 233.2 → Risk ≈ $1.3.
TP1 = 236 → Reward ≈ $1.5 → R:R ≈ 1.15.
TP2 = 237.6 → Reward ≈ $3.1 → R:R ≈ 2.4.
👉 Don’t settle for TP1 only. Hold partial to TP2 for 2:1+ R:R.
🔑 Final Checklist
No trades inside 233.5 – 234.5 box.
Enter only on breakout + close beyond that range.
Hard stop just outside opposite end of range.
Scale out at TP1, hold runner to TP2.
Apple Wave Analysis – 10 September 2025- Apple broke daily Rising Wedge
- Likely to fall to support level 225.00
Apple recently reversed from the resistance area between the resistance level 240.00 (which also reversed the price in March) and the upper daily Bollinger Band.
The downward reversal from this resistance area started the active downward correction which then broke the daily Rising Wedge from August.
Apple can be expected to fall further toward the next support level 225.00 (low of the previous correction 2 from August).