For all those reading this thread, keep in mind that these charts are not setups, but technical studies. In any event, any chart has a certain probability behind it. There are no charts that have a 100% probability.
I went back through this study and looked at the times price visited the current range. In the first yellow oval around 1999, the $VIX coming into that area was at the top of its range. When the $VIX moved lower then price broke over this area.
In the second yellow oval, when price moved in that area, the $VIX was in the lower part of the range and when it went higher then price went lower.
In the third yellow oval, when priced moved in that area, the $VIX had already broken through the support or floor for the range and so price then went higher.
In the current area, price seems to be stuck in the same range as in the prior ovals.
Now take a look at the $VIX and the lines drawn. The top blue oval represents a resistant point where it had deflected off of during the time price was in the area in 2002. The bottom blue oval is where $VIX had deflected off of in 2004.
Fast foward to the present and what do we have? The $VIX is stuck between the two points visited in 2002 and 2004.
The conclusion to all this is that you have to look closely at the $VIX. For price to go higher I think the $VIX needs to breakdown. For price to go lower, the $VIX needs to take out the roof. You have three other observable points in history to make this inference.
Im going to post another chart to what I believe might be effecting the $VIX in the current time frame.