Brian Shannon's approach categorizes these trends into three primary horizons:
A moving average on a higher timeframe dictates your bias on a lower timeframe. For example, if a stock is comfortably above a rising 50-day SMA on the daily chart, a trader should look for bullish continuation setups on the 10-minute chart when it tests its intraday moving averages. 4. The Anchored VWAP (AVWAP)
Higher highs and higher lows; strong volume on up-days. Brian Shannon's approach categorizes these trends into three
A signature tool associated with Brian Shannon’s workflow is the Anchored VWAP. Unlike standard VWAP, which resets daily, the Anchored VWAP allows traders to choose a specific psychological starting point—such as a major earnings release, a historic high, or a swing low—to measure the average price paid by market participants since that event. 3. Moving Average Alignment
Drop down to the Daily chart . Confirm that the daily timeframe is also in Stage 2. Look for a stock in a clear markup phase. Now, instead of buying at the high, you are looking for a pullback within the uptrend. The ideal scenario is a pullback to a key level, such as the AVWAP or the 5-day or 20-day moving average. This is the potential low-risk entry zone. The Anchored VWAP (AVWAP) Higher highs and higher
Wait for a pullback in a strong Stage 2 uptrend. Short Selling: Look for a rally in a Stage 4 decline.
After a long downtrend, the asset stops making lower lows and begins moving sideways. After a long downtrend
(like Thinkorswim or TradingView) that support Anchored VWAP and multiple timeframes.
Look for stocks trading above a rising 20-day and 50-day SMA.
Short-term moving averages flatten and cross over each other.
Instead of searching for unverified digital copies, studying the systematic concepts of market stages, multiple timeframes, and anchored VWAP will provide the lifetime framework necessary to navigate any market environment.