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Understanding Market Structure

The document provides an overview of understanding market structure and technical analysis. It discusses the three types of market structures: bullish trends defined by higher highs and higher lows, bearish trends defined by lower highs and lower lows, and sideways trends where price fails to make higher or lower highs and lows. It also describes common chart types like candlestick charts, bar charts, and line charts. Finally, it defines key concepts of support and resistance levels and how they indicate where price is likely to reverse direction.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
247 views

Understanding Market Structure

The document provides an overview of understanding market structure and technical analysis. It discusses the three types of market structures: bullish trends defined by higher highs and higher lows, bearish trends defined by lower highs and lower lows, and sideways trends where price fails to make higher or lower highs and lows. It also describes common chart types like candlestick charts, bar charts, and line charts. Finally, it defines key concepts of support and resistance levels and how they indicate where price is likely to reverse direction.

Uploaded by

tosheensaifi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 30

UNDERSTANDING

MARKET
STRUCTURE

www.zylostar.com +971- 50 498 2009


2009, City Tower 2, Sheikh [email protected]
Zayed Road, Dubai
02

TABLE OF CONTENT

01 Understanding the Market Instructure ..........................04

Types of Market Structure ................................................05


Bullish trend
02
01 Bearish trend
Sideways trend

Types of Charts ...................................................................09


Candlestick chart
03 Bar chart
Line chart

04 Support & Resistance .........................................................13

05 Chart Patterns .....................................................................15

Types of Chart Patterns .....................................................15


Continuation chart pattern
Bull Falling Wedge
Bear Rising Wedge
Bull Flag
Bear Flag
06 Bull Rectangle
Accending /Decending / Symmetric Triangle
Reversal chart pattern
Double Top
Double Bottom
Head and Shoulder Pattern
Inverse Head and Shoulder
Rising Wedge
Falling Wedge

Trend Analysis ......................................................................26


Up Trend
07 Down Trend
01 Ranging / Sideways

08 Range Bound Market ..........................................................30


04

Understanding the Market Instructure

The market's behavior, state, and


current flow are referred to as its
structure. It draws attention to
levels of support and resistance as
well as swing highs and lows.
Traders read and monitor market
structure as a trend-following
technique based on how an asset
moves. From Bullish moves to
Bearish movements and also the
Ranging moves.

Price Action is often referred to


as market structure because it
focuses on how the entire
market moves. When you are
aware of the pattern and the
expected movements, you can
then add additional criteria to
your trade qualifications such as
moving averages, pivot points,
volume, etc.
05

Types of Market Structure

Market structure provides a fundamental framework for


comprehending how markets function. It is made clearer with three
different market structure types while Price Action is the sole basis
on which the price moves without taking into account the trends
and how they might continue. A trend is a tendency for prices to
move consistently in one way over time. Trends can move in any
direction—up, down, or even sideways.

The market trend in 3 different directions at any given time and


understanding when a shift occurs based on the timeframe YOU
watch is pivotal to successful trading. The 3 types of market
structure are:
1. Bullish Trend
2. Bearish trend
3. Sideways trend
06

Types of Market Structure - Bullish Trend

This is when the price keeps on making a series of higher highs and higher
lows, it indicates a clear movement to the upside.

Bullish Trend

Bullish Trend

The bull trend is depicted by higher highs and higher lows. The trend
will continue in that direction until a lower low is printed by the asset
price. The trend begins to show signs of weakness when it fails to
print and higher high.
07

Types of Market Structure - Bearish Trend

As displayed on the diagram below, price keeps making a series of lower


highs and lower lows indicating a move to the downside.

Bearish Trend

Bearish Trend

The bear trend is the price action of lower lows and lower highs. The
bear trend will continue to fall as long as lower highs continue to
print, once a higher high comes into the price, the trend will end. The
sign that the trend may be reversing is price beginning to print higher
lows or equal lows.
08

Types of Market Structure - Sideways Trend

The market is said to be moving sideways or ranging when price fails to


make higher highs and higher lows or lower highs and lower lows, price is
said to be ranging in between the support and resistance level.

Sideways Trend

Sideways Trend
09

Types of Charts

To analyze how assess prices move, there will be a need for a sort of way
to look at the past and current price behavior. The first tool that a trader
using technical analysis needs to get familiar with is the chart. A chart is
just a graphic depiction of the price of a currency pair over a certain time
period.

It depicts the trading activity that occurs over the course of one trade
period, whether that be 1 minute, 4 hours, a day, a week or a month.
Any financial asset with historical price data can be represented
graphically for analysis.

Since price fluctuations are a succession of largely random events, it is our


responsibility as traders to manage risk and evaluate likelihood, and
charting can be useful in doing so.

Price movements are a succession of mostly random events, therefore our


goal as traders is to control risk and gauge probability, and charting can
help with that.

Here are the most important price charts:

1. Candlestick chart
2. Bar chart
3. Line chart
10

Types of Charts- Candlestick chart

The candlestick chart is a variant of the bar chart. Candlestick charts


display price data similarly to bar charts but in a more attractive manner.
This chart is popular among traders because it's not only more visually
appealing but also simpler to interpret.

Candlestick chart

Advantages of candlestick chartings

Candlesticks are simple to understand and are wonderful spot for


beginners to begin learning about chart analysis.
Candlesticks are really simple to use and information can quickly be
adapted in the bar notation.
Candlesticks and candlestick patterns have catchy names like Doji,
hammer, evening star, etc which aids in remembering what the pattern
represents.
Candlesticks are effective at detecting market turning moments, such as
trend reversals from an uptrend to a downtrend or from a downtrend to
an uptrend.
11

Types of Charts- Line Chart

A simple line chart draws a straight line from one closing price to the next.
We can visualize the overall price development of a currency pair over time by
connecting its values with a line.Although the line chart is easy to understand, it
might not give the trader much information about price behavior over the
course of the period.

This kind of chart is typically employed to obtain a "big picture" understanding


of price changes. The best way to depict trends, which is just the line's slope, is
using a line chart.

According to certain traders, the closing level is more significant than the open,
high, or low. Price changes throughout a trading session are disregarded by
focusing solely on the closure.

Line chart
12

Types of Charts- Bar Chart

The open, high, low, and close prices of an asset during a specific time period
are represented graphically in a bar chart. The high and low prices for the
specifiedperiod are shown by the vertical line on a price bar.The size of bars
can change from one bar to the next, over a range of bars, or both.

The vertical bar's bottom represents the lowest transacted price for that
time period, while its top represents the highest price paid.The vertical bar
itself displays the total trading range for the currency pair. The bars grow
bigger as the price swings become more erratic. The bars get smaller as the
price swings become quieter. This is an example of a bar chart:

Bar chart
13

Support & Resistance

Support and resistance levels are like the floor and the roof of a building. A ball
thrown to the roof is expected to drop and a ball bounced on the floor is also
expected to shoot up so consider the roof to the resistance and the floor as the
support. Support and resistance levels tell you if the price of anasset is likely to
stop moving in its prior direction and to start moving in the opposite direction in
the future. Knowing where an asset price may stop and turn around helps
traders to enter and exit their positions at the most profitable times.

Support

Support is a price level at which an asset price tends to stop moving down,
then turns around and starts climbing. Support levels indicate where
there will be a surplus of buyers.
14

Support & Resistance


Resistance

Resistance is a price level at which an asset tends to stop moving up, then
turns around and starts falling.
Resistance level indicates where there will be a surplus of sellers.
15

Chart Patterns

Chart patterns are natural pricing patterns that have the shape of natural
objects, such as triangle patterns, wedge patterns, and so on. Due to
natural occurrences, these patternskeep repeating over time. These
recurring patterns are used by traders to forecast themarket.

Chart patterns are made up of price waves or swings on the candlestick


chart. Here are the following chart patterns to be covered:

Double Top and Double Bottom


Head and Shoulders and Inverse Head and Shoulders
Rising and Falling Wedges
Bullish and Bearish Rectangles
Bullish and Bearish flags
Triangles (Symmetrical, Ascending, and Descending)

Types of Chart Patterns

Chart patterns are categorized into two primary types based on the trend
direction.

Continuation chart pattern

Reversal chart pattern


16

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Trend continuation patterns develop during a pause in current market


movements and primarily mark the continuation of movement. These
patterns indicate that the price action represents a pause in the current
trend.

They assist traders in distinguishing a pause in price movement from a


complete reversal and demonstrate that the price trend will continue in
the same direction upon breaking out of the pattern.

Here we discusse about

Bull Falling Wedge

Bear Rising Wedge

Bull Flag

Bear Flag

Bull Rectangle

AccendingTriangle

DecendingTriangle

Symmetric Triangle
17

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Bull Falling Wedge

The wedge pattern is a trend reversal chart pattern with a price structure
that looks like a wedge. A Wedge has a larger outer segment and a smaller
outer section. It's also a natural pattern because it shows pricing behavior
in its natural state.

Bull falling Wedge is a minor and short-term trend continuation pattern


indicating the previous direction which will prevail after its formation

Bear Rising Wedge


18

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Bull Flag

An impulsive wave and a retracement wave make up a flag pattern, which is a


chart pattern that indicates the continuation of a trend.

The most popular and sophisticated chart pattern is the flag chart. This chart
pattern's profound psychology makes it extremely useful for predicting the
direction of any asset inthe financial market.
19

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Bear Flag

Bull Rectangle

Bullish rectangles are continuation patterns that occur when a price pauses
during a strong bullish trend and temporarily bounces between two parallel
levels before the trend continues.
20

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Accending Triangle

Bullish rectangles are continuation patterns that form when a price pauses in
the middle of a strong bullish trend and temporarily bounces between two
parallel levels before continuing the trend.
21

Types of Chart Patterns - Continuation chart pattern

Decending Triangle

Symmetric Triangle

A symmetrical triangle is a chart pattern characterized by two converging trend


lines connecting a series of sequential peaks and troughs. These trend lines
should be converging at a roughly equal slope.
22

Types of Chart Patterns - Reversal chart pattern

Reversal patterns are those chart formations that signal that the ongoing trend
is about to change course. If a reversal chart pattern forms during an uptrend,
it hints that the trend will reverse and that the price will head down soon.

Here we discusse about

Double Top

Double Bottom

Head and Shoulder Pattern

Inverse Head and Shoulder

Rising Wedge

Falling Wedge
23

Types of Chart Patterns - Reversal chart pattern

Double Top

The double bottom is a bullish reversal chart pattern indicating the formation
of two consecutive lows in the support zone. A bullish trend reversal occurs
following the neckline breakout.
In this pattern, the neckline is created at the last price swing after two price
bottoms. The prior trend to the double bottom pattern should be bearish, and
it must form at the end of the bearish trend.

Double Bottom
24

Types of Chart Patterns - Reversal chart pattern

Head and Shoulder Pattern

The head and shoulder pattern is a reversal chart pattern that consists of three
price movements. The largest price swing is referred to as the head, and the
two waves to the left and right of the head are referred to as the shoulders. It is
called the head and shoulder pattern for this reason.
It is a recurring chart pattern that occurs following a bearish trend reversal in
the market.

Inverse Head and Shoulder


25

Types of Chart Patterns - Reversal chart pattern

Rising Wedge

The Rising Wedge is a bearish pattern that begins wide at the bottom and
contracts as prices move higher and the trading range narrows. If signals a
reversal if found in a bullish market.

Falling Wedge
26

Trend Analysis

A trend is a tendency for prices to move in a particular direction over a period.


Trends can be upward, downward and even sideways.

Price chart, happens to be the first tool that every trader using technical
analysis needs to learn.
A chart is simply a visual representation of a currency pair’s price over a set
period of time.

Here we discusse about

Uptrend

Downtrend

Ranging / Sideways
27

Trend Analysis - Uptrend

This is when the price keeps on making a series of higher highs and higher lows, it
indicates a clear movement to the upside.
28

Trend Analysis - Downtrend

As displayed on the diagram below, price keeps making a series of lower highs
and lower lows indicating a move to the downside.
29

Trend Analysis - Ranging / Sideways

The market is said to be moving sideways or ranging when price fails to make
higher highs and higher lows or lower highs and lower lows, price is said to be
ranging in between the support and resistance level.
30

Range Bound Market

The market is said to be moving sideways or ranging when price fails to make
higher highs and higher lows or lower highs and lower lows, price is said to be
ranging in between the support and resistance level.

The market movement could be classified as horizontal, ranging, or sideways.

It’s also known as a “choppy market” or a consolidation. A choppy market is


the opposite of a trending market.

In a choppy market, there is no clear direction, and the price just “chops
around” or “chops up and down” and trades within a very narrow range.

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