Teaching: Double Top Pattern



Let's break down a classic trend reversal setup. The double top is a "solid" signal indicating that buyers are completely exhausted, and it's a good opportunity to seize a profitable move during a market decline.

On the chart, it looks like this:
1. First top: Price rises with increased volume but is held back at a strong resistance level, forming a local bottom (neckline).
2. Second top: Buyers attempt to break through the seller zone again, but trading volume sharply diminishes. Price is blocked at the same level and turns downward again.

What is the logic?
Large funds have handed over all their chips to greedy retail traders at high levels. Buyers no longer have the strength to push the price higher. The top forms a "concrete wall." Once the price breaks below the support between the two tops, panic will set in, and many long positions will be wiped out.

How to trade correctly:
- Entry: Enter strictly when the price breaks downward through the neckline. It's best to wait for a volume-confirmed red candle closing below that level.
- Stop-loss: Place it above the second top. Protect your position strictly to prevent accidental stop-outs.
- Take profit: Measure the height from the top to the neckline, then move down from the breakout point by the same distance. That is our final target.

The most important rule:
Do not try to randomly short at the top. Be patient and wait for a clear volume breakout below the neckline before confidently entering.

Save this post and apply it in your trading practice.
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