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The Story

The Story of EventAreas

The Story of the EventAreas

The Story

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  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Failed PriceAction

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

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The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Chart

The Story of the Trend

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of the Chart

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of the EventAreas

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of EventAreas

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of the Event-Areas!

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”

The Story of the Event-Areas!

  1. Is the current trend bullish or bearish?

2. Is the main trend bullish or bearish on selected timeframe?

3. Where is price now? where are the keylevels?

4. Are there any Price Action?

5. Are there any failed Price Action?

6. Is there evidence that the market is getting rid of buyers or sellers?

💰“The Power of Price Action”

Quotes:

  1. “Let Price Tell the Story.”

  2. “Price Never Lies – Everything Else Might.”

  3. “Trade What You See, Not What You Think.”

  4. “Candles Speak Louder Than Indicators.”

  5. “The Truth is in the Candles.”
 

 

The Market’s Black Hole: Event-Areas

Ollie “The Oracle of Obvious” always said that a Key Level was the market’s memory, but an Event-Area was the market’s trauma. These were the price zones where major news—a surprise earnings report, a regulatory ruling, a CEO scandal—had caused the price to either surge or collapse so fast that it left a massive, hollow void on the chart.

Today, Ollie and Chip were watching Quantum Quibble (QQB), which was slowly climbing back toward a massive gap down that had occurred four months earlier.

Chip, clinging to his usual tangle of indicators, declared, “The slow, steady climb suggests the trend is weakening. I’m expecting heavy resistance here at $90, where the 200-period SMA is currently flatlining.”

Ollie simply pointed at the chart. “Chip, four months ago, QQB dropped from $110 to $85 in a single afternoon. That zone between $90 and $110 is not resistance; it’s a vacuum. The price moved through it too quickly for proper orders to be placed. There’s no friction, no anchor. Once it hits this Event-Area, it won’t be resisted—it will be sucked through.” He affectionately called these zones his “Market Black Holes.”

Ollie, setting a very tight Stop Loss just below $90, placed his trade with a calculated excitement. His logic was based on history: the price had no reason to slow down where it had previously demonstrated extreme speed. His trade was banking on the efficiency of the market to “fill the void.”

Chip scoffed and decided to short the conventional $90 resistance.

QQB hit $90, momentarily pausing for half an hour. Chip started high-fiving himself, convinced his indicator-laden patience had paid off. Then, the price action demonstrated the terrifying power of an Event-Area. A wave of buying entered, and QQB didn’t just climb; it rocket-boosted, slicing through $95, then $100, in a dizzying vertical climb that lasted the rest of the day.

Chip was stopped out instantly, his short having been short-circuited by the momentum.

Ollie, closing his 5R trade near the top of the Event-Area, smiled. “The lesson, Chip, is that when the market shows you it can move fast through a specific area, you treat that area with respect. It’s a low-friction zone. Professionals don’t bet against an Event-Area; they stand aside and wait for the price to tell them which way the vacuum is pulling, then they ride the rush.”