Many traders have heard this saying: consecutive positive candles with doubled volume indicate that the main force is building positions. This is actually supported by evidence. When the stock or cryptocurrency price suddenly shows a series of consecutive bullish candles at the bottom area, and trading volume significantly increases, it often signals that large funds are quietly entering, bullish forces are gradually accumulating, and market sentiment is shifting.
From the trend performance, the standard pattern is as follows: the price starts from the bottom, first with small bullish candles testing the waters, followed by medium and large bullish candles appearing in sequence, continuously raising the bottom. Throughout the process, no bearish candles or doji stars disrupt the rhythm; it’s a strong bullish pattern with candles engulfing candles, indicating strong control by buyers.
Trading volume is the true validator. Doubling volume is not casual; it must be at least twice the volume of the previous trading day, and the volume increases more and more as it progresses, forming a stepwise progression. This volume-price relationship indicates that buying power is continuously strengthening, not just testing the waters, but genuine capital entering the market.
In practice, "Nine-Nine Bright Sun" and "Six Consecutive Bulls" are two of the most typical textbook patterns. If you can memorize these case charts and repeatedly study the logic behind them, you will be more敏锐地捕捉到市场转暖的信号,这对制定交易策略会有不小的帮助。
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ShibaMillionairen't
· 01-05 01:36
I'm tired of the saying "double volume consecutive bullish days," the real key to making money still depends on the main force's true intentions. Volume can be deceptive.
Six consecutive bullish days sound great, but in reality, those are the same patterns where people cut losses.
These textbook patterns have been overplayed, and retail investors should be cautious when they see them.
Bottom volume increase? I see it as the panic sellers jumping in during the auction.
Double volume building positions? Bro, I've seen double volume during distribution... the pattern is so similar that you can't tell the difference.
This article almost directly says "Buy with me, and you'll be right," which is a bit of an overinterpretation.
Compared to the "Nine Nine Sunny Days," the next day it just tanks—familiar套路
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ContractCollector
· 01-04 17:38
This set of theories has been heard countless times, the key is how not to get scammed online.
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Double-volume continuous gains are indeed easy to appear, the problem is that few actually profit from it.
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I just want to know, why is it that every time I see it, it has already risen halfway.
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Six consecutive days of gains, even armchair strategists can see it in hindsight.
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The explanation of volume and price coordination sounds simple, but at the moment of real trading, who can stay calm and not buy the dip?
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There are too many signals at the bottom, making it difficult to determine which one is truly reliable.
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I've encountered this pattern before, but I never managed to buy the bottom.
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Instead of studying consecutive gains with increased volume, it's better to study how to survive the next crash.
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PanicSeller69
· 01-04 16:19
The idea of consecutive bullish days with doubled volume has been heard too many times; in real trading, it's still easy to fall into traps.
Wait, what happens after six consecutive bullish days? The lack of follow-up is the most heartbreaking.
I've known this logic for a long time, but the key is how not to get cut.
The combination of volume and price is well explained, but identifying the bottom is the real challenge.
Is the main force building positions? Why do I always find it at the top?
These patterns feel quite classic, but the market is so smart—are they still so obvious?
Accumulation of bullish candles isn't necessarily a good thing; check if there's hidden reduction in positions.
Heard of "Sunny Days in September," but the weather changed, right?
Doubled volume is indeed crucial, but how to distinguish between institutional and retail volume?
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IfIWereOnChain
· 01-03 13:57
The idea of six consecutive bullish days with doubled volume is heard quite often, but how many can truly bottom out?
Wait, isn't this logic too perfect? In reality, which time hasn't been broken through?
For a standard pattern like six consecutive bullish days, would the main force really make it so easy for you to see?
Honestly, volume and price action are the real key; otherwise, it's all just talk on paper.
"Nine-nine bright sunny days" sounds like a joke—can it really be that miraculous?
A sudden surge in volume at the bottom—I've seen too many fake breakouts like this; caution is necessary.
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NotGonnaMakeIt
· 01-03 13:56
Double volume consecutive bullish days is a theory I've heard many times, but when it comes to actual trading, it's still easy to get caught in pitfalls.
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Six consecutive bullish days are indeed tempting, but I'm more concerned about how long this wave can last.
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Basically, it's about whether big funds are really lurking; volume can't be fooled.
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Consecutive bullish days combined with double volume sounds advanced, but in reality, it depends on whether the price can hold steady afterward; otherwise, it's all虚假.
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This approach works well in a bull market, but in a bear market, it becomes a trap for harvesting profits.
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I've heard about the "Nine-Nine Sunny Day" pattern, but I've encountered it only a few times; most of the time, it's a false breakout.
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The key is to distinguish between genuine double volume and fake double volume; many times, it's just the main players shaking out their positions.
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Remember, a pattern doesn't equal profit; mindset and risk management are what determine victory or defeat.
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SolidityStruggler
· 01-03 13:46
The idea of continuous bullish days with double volume has been heard too many times; the key is whether real money is actually entering the market. Don't just look at the candlestick charts and dream.
Has this bottom truly formed? It still feels like there's a lot of water in it.
Six consecutive bullish days sound easy, but in practice, many traders cut their losses; not every consecutive bullish day can make you money.
A surge in volume might be a sign of distribution; who says it must be accumulation? The subsequent trend is what really matters.
The concept of bottom testing is too vague. What exactly counts as a true bottom? No one can say for sure.
It's a common topic, and this pattern has been overused. Whether it can still be used now is really hard to say.
A simultaneous rise in volume and price is indeed tempting, but if you enter at the wrong time, you'll get caught on the wrong side. The risk is always there.
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SelfMadeRuggee
· 01-03 13:46
The idea of consecutive bullish days with doubled volume has become tiresome; the key still depends on whether the trading volume truly keeps up. Don't deceive yourself.
Six consecutive bullish days are indeed impressive, but those small bullish candles at the bottom are often traps. Don't put too much faith in this technical analysis.
Is doubled volume really that important? I think it also depends on the flow of funds.
Can the "Nine Nine Bright Sun" pattern still be used now? Market conditions have changed.
It's easy to say, but in actual operation, the probability of missing out is even higher. It's better to be a bit slow than to chase highs.
Volume and price coordination is fundamental, but small funds simply can't keep up with the pace of the big players.
Consecutive bullish days don't necessarily mean accumulation; they could also be the final push before a shakeout. Who can tell the difference?
Mastering this pattern doesn't necessarily guarantee profits; mindset is the most difficult part.
If large funds had entered early, they would have already driven the price up. Retail investors wouldn't have a chance to notice.
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SolidityJester
· 01-03 13:40
Hearing the phrase "continuous gains with double volume" so often, it actually makes it easier to get stabbed in the back when it happens.
If the main force is building a position so obviously, hasn't it already been snatched away?
Where's the promised "Sunny Days of September"? All I see is the September curse.
Many traders have heard this saying: consecutive positive candles with doubled volume indicate that the main force is building positions. This is actually supported by evidence. When the stock or cryptocurrency price suddenly shows a series of consecutive bullish candles at the bottom area, and trading volume significantly increases, it often signals that large funds are quietly entering, bullish forces are gradually accumulating, and market sentiment is shifting.
From the trend performance, the standard pattern is as follows: the price starts from the bottom, first with small bullish candles testing the waters, followed by medium and large bullish candles appearing in sequence, continuously raising the bottom. Throughout the process, no bearish candles or doji stars disrupt the rhythm; it’s a strong bullish pattern with candles engulfing candles, indicating strong control by buyers.
Trading volume is the true validator. Doubling volume is not casual; it must be at least twice the volume of the previous trading day, and the volume increases more and more as it progresses, forming a stepwise progression. This volume-price relationship indicates that buying power is continuously strengthening, not just testing the waters, but genuine capital entering the market.
In practice, "Nine-Nine Bright Sun" and "Six Consecutive Bulls" are two of the most typical textbook patterns. If you can memorize these case charts and repeatedly study the logic behind them, you will be more敏锐地捕捉到市场转暖的信号,这对制定交易策略会有不小的帮助。