Three short-selling signals under bearish structure, the core is to wait for rebound confirmation, not to blindly chase shorts.

① Previous high resistance level: When the price rebounds to the previous high point and shows signs of stagnation or volume reversal, this is the first signal to enter the market. At this point, the market attempts a counterattack but fails, and the bears organize their defense here.

② Confirmation of secondary rebound: After a decline, the price rebounds again but fails to break the previous high, forming a clear “lower low, lower high.” This rebound is usually on reduced volume and represents the second opportunity to short under the structure.

③ Confirmation of previous low breakdown: When the previous low is effectively breached, the trend is further confirmed, and waiting for a minor pullback is the last “confirmation signal point” to short in line with the trend. At this time, trading leans towards being conservative, with clear and definite stop-loss points.

The trend structure is symmetrical; how to short in a bearish structure is the same as how to go long in a bullish structure, just in the opposite direction, with the same logic.