Continuing the trend. It may be easy but difficult
[ ] When the price is moving in the right trend, the next candle closes above the previous candle, and the recent highs and lows close higher than the previous highs and lows, the trend continues. As long as the price hasn't moved far into the support or resistance zones, it still has the potential to continue following the trend it is currently in. Because it hasn't encountered a strong barrier.
[ ] Just like a wave in the sea, the next wave will be higher than the previous wave, and of course, only when it hits the shore's strong barrier will the wave break.
Example: The strong barrier here is the price range that when we trade, we choose a larger timeframe such as m15, h1, then the h4, 1D barrier.
Determining the strong price zone where the price may reverse is very important because that is where orders are closed.
[ ] If the price breaks through and then retraces, entering an order on the next breakout is safer. At that point, the stop-loss will be shorter and safer because one side has already entered but the other side still wins, and the trend continues. Entering on the first breakout can be riskier because the price can completely return to the previous major trend.
[*] In reality, when trading, we must observe multiple timeframes to have a more objective view on whether the price has clearly broken through or not. And whether this price zone is truly a tradable range.
There are many skills to learn to achieve a perfect trade with the lowest risk.
Forget about predicting tops and bottoms. Gradually get used to the idea that the buying or selling side may fail in protecting important price zones, causing the old trend to lose its validity and preparing for a new trend.