This setup is interesting because the chart is giving enough structure to build scenarios without needing to predict every candle.
For VIX, the context is risk hedging and equity fear levels. The key idea around risk planning is that position size can decide whether a good idea survives normal volatility. That means I would not build a trade only from the direction of the last candle.
My first scenario would be confirmation: price holds the important area, volume stays supportive, and the next pullback does not fully erase the previous move. In that case, define the loss first, then decide whether the trade is worth taking.
The opposite scenario is just as important. If price rejects the level, closes back into the old range, or moves too far without offering a clean stop, the setup becomes lower quality. The trade only makes sense if the stop can sit beyond the structure, not randomly inside normal volatility.
This is not about being bullish or bearish by default. It is about having a plan for both continuation and failure before the market forces a decision.
For VIX, the context is risk hedging and equity fear levels. The key idea around risk planning is that position size can decide whether a good idea survives normal volatility. That means I would not build a trade only from the direction of the last candle.
My first scenario would be confirmation: price holds the important area, volume stays supportive, and the next pullback does not fully erase the previous move. In that case, define the loss first, then decide whether the trade is worth taking.
The opposite scenario is just as important. If price rejects the level, closes back into the old range, or moves too far without offering a clean stop, the setup becomes lower quality. The trade only makes sense if the stop can sit beyond the structure, not randomly inside normal volatility.
This is not about being bullish or bearish by default. It is about having a plan for both continuation and failure before the market forces a decision.
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