Start path
Technical Analysis + Price Action · Multi-Timeframe Analysis

Common MTF mistakes

Identify the most common multi-timeframe analysis mistakes and the corrections for each.

3 min read+25 XPLesson 10 of 96
Start reading

Lesson path

Technical Analysis + Price Action

Multi-Timeframe Analysis

Lesson 10 of 9610%
Lesson 10 of 96Technical Analysis + Price ActionMulti-Timeframe Analysis

Today's tiny win: make one idea click.

Identify the most common multi-timeframe analysis mistakes and the corrections for each.

Learn itSpot itPass the check

Five mistakes. Five fixes.

We wrap the chapter with the five mistakes that wreck multi-timeframe analysis in practice. You will recognize at least two from your own trading. That is normal. The point of this lesson is to name them so you can spot them in real time and apply the fix.

Mistake one: trading from the LTF without HTF bias. You open the 15m, see a bullish pattern, take the long. You skipped the bias step. Fix: rule that no trade gets opened until you can state Daily bias in one sentence. Mistake two: overriding the HTF because the LTF feels urgent. The Daily is bearish, the 5m is screaming bullish, you flip. Fix: HTF wins, always. The LTF rally inside a bearish Daily is a pullback, not a reversal.

Mistake three: 'the trend is your friend until the end' misapplied. Traders read the trend continuation rule, then refuse to take HTF reversal evidence seriously. They ride trends into clear HTF reversals because 'the trend is your friend.' Fix: the trend is your friend only until it isn't, and the HTF tells you when it isn't. Watch for Daily-level lower highs in an uptrend, or higher lows in a downtrend.

Mistake four: ignoring HTF resistance because the LTF looks bullish. Price is approaching a clear Daily resistance, the 15m is flashing bullish, you buy into the wall. Fix: HTF levels are constraints on LTF aggression. Before any long, ask 'is there overhead HTF resistance in the next 50 pips?' If yes, the trade is at minimum smaller and at most skipped. Mistake five: refreshing too often. Top-down works because HTF context is stable. Refreshing the 15m every 30 seconds re-injects noise. Fix: set alerts, walk away, return when the alert fires.

Recap of the five: no LTF without HTF bias, HTF wins on conflict, trends end and HTF tells you, HTF levels constrain LTF aggression, set alerts and walk away. Chapter complete.

Knowledge check

Answer before moving on.

0 / 3 answered

1. Daily on US30 is in a clear downtrend. The 15m prints a bullish flag. What is the corrected reading?

2. You are about to buy GBP/JPY because the 15m looks bullish. Price is 20 pips below a clear Daily resistance. What does the chapter say?

3. What is the recommended fix for refreshing the 15m chart every 30 seconds?

Lesson handoff

Pass the check before saving.

Use the knowledge check first. After you pass it, this card turns into the save-and-continue handoff.

Practice stack

Read the lesson here. Mark the chart on TradingView. Compare brokers with the checklist.

TradingView is the chart workspace most learners already recognize: watchlists, alerts, drawings, and clean multi-market charts. Broker research stays methodology-first: jurisdiction, costs, platform, withdrawals, and risk before any account decision.

TradingView is charting software, not a signal. Check broker eligibility, funding timing, and risk before opening anything.