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Understanding Time-Based vs. Volume-Based Stock Price Levels. P1

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Understanding Time-Based vs. Volume-Based Stock Price Levels

Key Concepts:

Time-Based Price Level
Definition: The duration a stock spends at a specific price.
Example: A stock trades at $50 for 2 hours but with only 100 volume.
Significance: The market accepts $50 as fair value because it spends more time there. Moves away are slower.
Volume-Based Price Level
Definition: The amount of shares traded at a specific price.
Example: A stock trades at $40 for 5 minutes but with 200 volume.
Significance: $40 may be a discounted price or manipulation, depending on history.


Interpreting the Levels:
1. Fair Value (Time-Based)
  • Prolonged time at a price (e.g., $50) = Market consensus on fair value.
  • Low volume + high time = Stability; reversals are gradual.


2. Discounted Price (Volume-Based)
  • High volume + short time = Potential discount if the price was a previous fair value.
  • Confirmed Discount:
  • Example: Milk historically fair at $1 → Drops to $1 (high volume) → Rebounds to $2.
  • Traders recognize the discount, leading to rapid buying.
  • Manipulation/Fakeout:
  • Example: Price drops to $0.15 (no history) → High volume but weak rebound.


3. Manipulation/Fake-Out
  • High volume at new/unfamiliar levels (e.g., $0.15) lacks conviction.



Practical Takeaways:
Prioritize Historical Context:
High volume + past fair value = Strong signal (e.g., $1 → $2).
Speed of Moves:
Discounted prices ($1) → Fast, high-volume rallies.
Combine Time & Volume:
Fair value = Time > Volume.
Discounts = Volume > Time.

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