That's not how real-trading works and its a poor way to learn.
For example, the OP has been posting charts that doesn't contain all the information that he see when he trades nor does he explain why he selected that particular stock to trade versus thousands of other stocks. I'm sure there's a reason why he's trading this stock versus any other stock.
Simply, take way the market context of the trade...you will not be successful in using any trade method including technical analysis. Therefore, if the OP post a chart again...post the entire chart, name the trading instrument and explain why he's trading that particular chart versus any other stock.
Once again, TA does not work alone and it was not designed as such. You at least need to know what your trading at the minimum. Therefore, if the OP does this again...post the entire chart, name the trading instrument and explain why he's trying this particular stock versus any other stock to make any analysis worthwhile.
Like I explained before...the exact same price action chart will have different market context when you slap on a different name for the trading instrument. Therefore, the analysis will be different just because the name of the trading instrument is different even though the price action on the chart is exactly the same. For example, a week ago...would you been going Long when China's markets were getting killed...now pretend the same chart was posted last week in real-time. Keep that picture in your head and now change the name of the chart to Treasury ZB futures for the exact same price chart at the exact same time...
China's stock goes down as a downtrend while Treasury ZB futures goes higher as an uptrend.
Same price action chart but the difference is the market context (different trading instruments).
I don't think the name of the trading instrument is as important so much as what class of movement it has. Some traders make money using volatile stocks (jet skis). Some make money using slow gentle rolling stocks (ocean tankers). I like the ocean tankers because political news and economic policy changes doesn't swamp the boat so easily.
