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--- Technical Analysis Using Multiple Time Frame By Brian -

The navigator translates the astronomer’s long-term view into a tactical map. While the daily chart tells me we are in an uptrend, the 4-hour chart tells me we are currently in a pullback within that uptrend. This is where I define the "zone" of interest—key support/resistance levels, order blocks, or Fibonacci retracement levels. The navigator answers: What is the current leg doing, and where is the logical place for a reversal?

Introduction: The Problem with a Single Lens Every trader remembers their first "perfect" chart. For me, it was a 15-minute candlestick pattern on a volatile stock. The breakout was clean, the volume was high, and my confidence was absolute. I entered the trade, watched it climb 2%, then sat in horror as it reversed 5% against me within an hour. My analysis was correct, but my timing was catastrophic. That painful lesson drove me to develop the single most important pillar of my trading methodology: Multiple Time Frame (MTF) Analysis. --- Technical Analysis Using Multiple Time Frame By Brian

The astronomer asks one question: Where is the tide going? On the daily or weekly chart, I ignore the noise of individual candlesticks. I am only looking for the primary trend structure. Is the market making higher highs and higher lows (bullish)? Lower highs and lower lows (bearish)? Or is it coiling in a tight range (consolidation)? This frame determines my bias. If the daily chart is in a strong downtrend, I will never take a long position based on a 5-minute setup. The astronomer saves me from fighting the tide. The navigator answers: What is the current leg

Most retail traders look at one chart, see a signal, and pull the trigger. They are like a general planning a battle by only looking through a sniper scope. You might see the enemy soldier, but you have no idea where the front line is, where the reserves are located, or if a tank division is about to roll over your position. MTF analysis solves this by providing a top-down, hierarchical view of the market. In this essay, I will explain my framework for using MTF analysis to align trends, pinpoint entries, and manage risk like a professional. My methodology is built on a three-tiered system. You cannot trade all time frames equally; you must assign each a specific job. The breakout was clean, the volume was high,

I learned this rule the hard way during a swing trade in a commodity futures contract. The daily chart was a perfect descending channel—lower highs, consistent closes near the lows. Yet, I took a long position because the 1-hour chart showed a bullish hammer candlestick. I rationalized it: "The bounce could be the start of a reversal." It wasn't. The daily trend crushed my stop loss within two hours.

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