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Technical Analysis Using Multiple Timeframes Brian Shannon ● «ULTIMATE»

Maximum Trading Gains with the Anchored VWAP results from decades of research and application by the author. It builds on Shannon'

Consider a trader evaluating a stock, XYZ Corp. The weekly chart shows price above the 50 EMA and above an anchored VWAP from the 52-week low—a bullish higher timeframe. The daily chart pulls back to the 21 EMA on decreasing volume. The trader places the stock on a watchlist. The next day, the 4-hour chart stabilizes at the anchored VWAP and prints a bullish hammer candle. The lower timeframe (15-minute) then breaks a small downtrend line with a surge in volume. The trader enters long. The stop loss is placed just below the anchored VWAP on the 4-hour chart (logical, structural support). The target is the next anchored VWAP resistance level from the prior high. Every decision—trend, entry, stop, target—is derived from a specific timeframe. There is no guesswork. technical analysis using multiple timeframes brian shannon

Short positions are favored as the price stays below falling moving averages. The Multi-Timeframe Hierarchy Maximum Trading Gains with the Anchored VWAP results

: Shannon posits that every market move is part of a larger structure. Primary Trend : Weekly charts guide overall direction. The daily chart pulls back to the 21

It helps traders visualize where the "average participant" is in profit or loss, often leading to predictable behavior at those levels. 4. Trade Execution and Risk Management Shannon’s golden rule is simple: "Only Price Pays" . Indicators are secondary to price action. Alignment:

The missing link is context.