Technical Analysis Guide to Deciphering Market Manipulation

Interpreting price movements in financial markets is an art of deciphering complex dynamics that guide investor psychology, far beyond merely tracking rising and falling trends. While some chart behaviors may appear as strong opportunities at first glance, they often harbor structures that differ from natural market flows and manipulate investor perception. Therefore, focusing not just on the visible surface of the chart but on how the movement forms and the supporting signals is of vital importance for investment decisions.
Manipulative Dynamics Beyond the Visible
Manipulative movements attempt to artificially influence price perception by targeting investors' tendency for quick decision-making and emotional weaknesses. These structures typically manifest themselves through sharp rises, sudden drops, or unusual volume changes.
The Revelation of Volume and Price: Fake Breakouts
The relationship between price movement and volume is one of the most critical indicators for measuring the reliability of a chart. A healthy uptrend requires price increases to be accompanied by volume support. Otherwise, the upward movement of the price may be a sign of artificial manipulation.
Trend Structure and Volatility Management
To distinguish manipulative movements, trend structure and volatility dynamics must be read together. While uptrends form higher lows and highs, manipulative indentations can cause a temporary disruption in this structure.
From the perspective of a Technical Analysis Director, the most definitive way to distinguish manipulative movements is through price-volume divergence. In my algo-trading strategies, I classify breakouts near Ichimoku Clouds and Fibonacci retracement levels that lack volume support as "noise". These spikes, created by market makers to gather liquidity, target the stop levels of undisciplined investors; therefore, I always seek confirmation from timeframes and momentum oscillators before execution approval.