It has been a long time since I wrote about the short-term trend of the market. From January to early April, the market dropped too smoothly.

Even though there was a one-day surge of ten thousand points during this period, it was instantly crushed back down the next day.

The change in the unidirectional trend stems from Trump's shift after April 9, as well as the upcoming U.S. debt maturity issue, and whether the dollar will remain strong has suddenly given the market a risk-hedging attribute.

Currently, the market views on the trend are very polarized, and the bulls are increasing, so we will use the left-side approach to look at the general outline of this week.

Chart 1 (Daily chart): After creating a high point at a high position, the market has started to experience several pin bars above. The MACD indicator in the short term also belongs to weakening bullish momentum, and the daily line is forming an arc trend. If there is no strong breakthrough today, the subsequent trend will show a volatile downward movement. The short-term limit for the drop is expected to break below 908, possibly falling below 87k within three days.

Chart 2 (Weekly chart): The weekly chart shows a strong bullish candlestick supporting the strong red three soldiers pattern appearing at the lower K-line. However, since the weekly close on February 24, there has been no substantial breakthrough above, so the selling pressure remains strong above. Therefore, we might take advantage of this pressure to short the market and see if a downward reversal forms on the weekly chart, potentially engulfing most of last week's gains.

Chart 3 (Four-hour chart): On the four-hour chart, a simple downward trend line has formed. After touching the lower Bollinger Band, the market experienced a pin bar. We can assume that if the upper Bollinger Band cannot be breached today, taking short positions along the upper Bollinger Band would be a very conservative strategy.