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Technical Analysis + Price Action · Multi-Timeframe Analysis

When timeframes disagree (and why Daily wins)

Justify why the higher timeframe takes precedence when timeframe signals conflict.

3 min read+25 XPLesson 3 of 96
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Technical Analysis + Price Action

Multi-Timeframe Analysis

Lesson 3 of 963%
Lesson 3 of 96Technical Analysis + Price ActionMulti-Timeframe Analysis

Today's tiny win: make one idea click.

Justify why the higher timeframe takes precedence when timeframe signals conflict.

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The disagreement is the opportunity

Here is a scene you will live many times. You did your top-down. The Daily on USD/JPY is in a strong uptrend. You marked a 4H pullback zone. You go for a coffee, come back, and the 15-minute chart looks brutal — three big bearish candles in a row, RSI screaming oversold to nobody in particular. Your gut says short. What just happened?

What happened is the market did exactly what you wanted. The pullback is the move that delivers price to your zone. It looks scary on the 15m because that is the only chart where the pullback fills the screen. On the Daily, the same move is one small red candle inside a long green sequence. Same market, two stories — and the bigger story has not changed.

Why the rule is fixed: bigger timeframes contain more trading activity. A Daily candle represents 24 hours of buying and selling from every type of participant — pension funds, hedge funds, banks, retail. A 15m candle represents the last 15 minutes of mostly short-term participants reacting to the last 15 minutes. The Daily carries more information. When information conflicts, the deeper source wins.

The only time you flip your Daily bias is when the Daily itself flips. That means a clean break of a major Daily structure — a higher low taken out in an uptrend, or a lower high reclaimed in a downtrend. Until that happens, the LTF noise is just noise. Painful noise sometimes, but still noise. Stick to the rule and you will save yourself from a thousand bad reversals.

Recap: timeframes disagreeing is normal. The higher one always wins. Only a higher-timeframe break flips your higher-timeframe bias.

Knowledge check

Answer before moving on.

0 / 3 answered

1. The Daily is in a clear uptrend. The 15m just printed three strong bearish candles into your buy zone. What is the most likely correct read?

2. Why does the higher timeframe carry more weight than the lower?

3. When is it appropriate to flip your Daily bias from bullish to bearish?

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