Which surely means that if you only mark the obvious ones, they are GREAT trading points.
Which, partly, answers your question. If your price is rising, the first line, beng the first to go, is crossed with difficulty and so on, each line triggering a series of stops, with reducing difficulty until there are no more buyers, or no more sellers. If crossing the top line takes you into new high ground and does not return, then the sellers have given up.
That theory means that you should draw in all of the points that you see because you need them in your assessment as to whether the market is getting tired and, if it is, how many more resistance lines lie ahead of it.
Now, if while all this is going on, some really big players decide to place orders higher up
because they think that the
buyers are weakening, how are we going to know that? Volume won't tell us because it has not happened, yet.
This is one of the reasons that I take these theories with a large pinch of salt.
Perhaps, the highest line will be the obvious one to these, so far, uncommitted traders, because there has been so much buyer/seller activity lower down, that they will be exhausted when they reach the final line.
Split