What Is Volume
What Is Volume
What Is Volume
The volume represents all the recorded trades for a security during a specified period. This specified period
can range from daily charts to 1-minute charts.
Volume analysis is the technique of assessing the health of a trend based on volume activity. Volume is one of
the oldest day trading indicators in the market. I would dare to say the volume indicator is the most popular
indicator used by market technicians as well. Trading platforms may lack certain indicators; however, I have
yet to find a platform that does not include volume.
In addition to technicians, fundamental investors also take notice the numbers of shares traded for a given
security.
Bottom line, the volume indicator is one of the simplest methods for observing buying and selling activity of a
stock at key levels. The tricky part is volume can provide conflicting messages for the same setup. Your ability
to assess what volume is telling you in conjunction with price action can be a key factor in your ability to turn a
profit in the market.
Most trading platforms, print each volume bar as either green or red. Green bars are printed if the stock closes
up for a period and red bar indicate a stock closed lower for a given period.
This colour coding need not mean there was more down or up volume for the period; it just represents how the
stock closed.
Volume Indicator
The volume indicator helps us know market's intentions across common day trading setups:
1. Breakouts
2. Trending Stocks
3. Volume Spikes
4. False Breakouts
In addition, we will discuss advanced volume analysis techniques and apply these methods to assess the
strength of the equities and bitcoin markets.
Traders will look for breaks of support and resistance to enter positions
There are two key components to confirm a breakout: (1) price and (2) volume.
When stocks break critical levels without volume, you should consider the breakout suspect and prime for a
reversal off the highs/lows.
Valid Breakout
Let's test to see if you are picking up the concepts of breakouts with volume.
Breakdown or not?
Breakdown
In Summary
1. The stock has volatile price action with most of the candle colour mirroring the direction of the
primary trend (i.e. red candles for a breakdown and green candles for a breakout).
2. On the breakout, volume should pick up
3. The price action after the breakout should move swiftly in your favour
Trending Stocks
When a stock is moving higher in a stair-step approach, you will want to see volume increase on each
successive high and decrease on each pullback. The underlying message is there is more positive volume as the
stock is moving higher, thus confirming the health of the trend.
This sort of confirmation in the volume activity is usually a result of a stock in an impulsive phase of a trend.
Volume Increase
As the stock moves in your favour, you should continuously monitor the volume activity to see if the move is in
jeopardy of reversing. The speed of this setup is much slower versus the other strategies discussed in this
article; however, the difficulty reveals itself in the increased number of false moves, which are commonplace in
the afternoon.
These charts are just a sample of what happens far too often when it comes to afternoon trading. So, how do
you find the stocks that will trend all day? After many years of trading, I can tell you I honestly don't know.
In Summary
1. Look for volume to push the stock in the direction of the primary trend
2. You need to be prepared to hold a stock for multiple hours to reap the real rewards
3. Figure out how to identify the stocks that will trend all day prior to 10 am.
4. Instead of using volume to predict which stocks will trend, simply use volume as an indicator
that keeps you in a winning position
Volume Spike
Volume spikes are often the result of news-driven events. It occurs when there is an increase of 500% or more
in volume over the recent volume average. This volume spike will often lead to sharp reversals since the moves
are unsustainable due to the imbalance of supply and demand. Trading counter to volume spikes can be
profitable, but it requires enormous skill and mastery of volume analysis.
These volume spikes can also be an opportunity for you as a trader to take a counter move position. You need
to know what you are doing if you are going to trade volume spikes. The action is swift and you have to keep
your stops tight, but if you time it right, you can capture some nice gains.
Let's walk through a few volume spike examples, which resulted in a reversal off the spike high or low.
In Summary
The other setup with volume spikes is candlesticks with extremely long wicks. In this scenario, stocks will
often retest the low or high of the spike. You can take a position in the direction of the primary trend after the
stock has had a nice retreat from the initial volume and price spike.
In Summary
I would be remiss if I didn't touch on the topic of failed breakouts. As a day trader looking for breakouts, you
will have fair share of trades that just don't work out. So, how do you know when a trade is failing? Simple
answer - you can see the warning signs in the volume.
False Breakout 2
In Summary
1. Breakouts often fail
2. If the volume dries up on the breakout, look to get out within a few candles if things don't turn around
3. If you want to play the reversal, wait for a few candles to see if the peak holds and enter a trade counter
to the morning gap
4. You can use the peak of the first candlestick as a logical point to exit the trade
The strategies discussed in this article can be used with any stock and on any time frame. The most important
point to remember is you want to see volume expand in the direction of your trade. Keep this in the back of
your mind and you will do just fine.
Overlay of Volume on Price (i.e. Adding the Volume Profile to the Chart)
Shifting gears back into volume analysis with stocks, the next is using a volume overlay with the price.
The overlay is slightly different from printing volume on the x-axis by allowing you to see where the
concentration of orders took place.
This can provide you with a clear view into where there are many traders and you can then use this to validate
a particular support or resistance level.
The simple way of determining where to focus your attention is on the longest volume bar. Do you see how this
view lets you know where all the trades were made for a given security? This layer of information is invisible
with volume underneath the chart.
You can try this out by combining these key volume levels with Fibonacci.
Notice in the above chart of that there was significant resistance at the 110 - 115 level.
A part of the setup which may not have been apparent is $115 was not only a significant volume resistance
level but also the 61.8% retracement level.
Once Stock did clear both of these hurdles, the stock shot off to the moon.
The point is you do not only want to use volume and price action. It is also great to add another validation
technique like Fibonacci to the chart to gain clues of where the price is likely to break.
Volume can, however, provide you with further insights into the internal health of a trend.