Multiple time frame analysis is a disciplined approach to filter market noise and improve trade timing. By starting with the larger trend and drilling down to entries, traders can avoid fighting the dominant market direction. While specific systems (such as those in commercial works by Brian Shannon and others) add proprietary nuances, the core principles remain accessible and evidence-based. Mastery of MTF requires practice, consistent frame selection, and strict adherence to the top-down hierarchy.

A single time frame chart often gives an incomplete market perspective. A 5-minute chart may show an uptrend, while the daily chart reveals a dominant downtrend. Without context, traders risk entering trades against the larger trend. Multiple time frame analysis addresses this by systematically reviewing the same asset across different chart intervals to align risk and direction.

MTF analysis typically uses three levels:

Common ratios between time frames are 4× to 6× (e.g., 15-min → 1-hour → 4-hour → daily).

Assume the daily chart of a stock is in an uptrend (higher highs, above 50 EMA).
On the hourly chart, price retraces to the 50 EMA and forms a doji candle with decreasing volume.
On the 15-minute chart, a bullish divergence appears on RSI (price makes lower low, RSI makes higher low), and a bullish engulfing candle closes above the 15-minute 20 EMA.
A long entry near the 15-minute close with a stop below the recent low would align with the daily uptrend and hourly pullback.

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