The user sees these alerts whenever a consolidation pattern ends abruptly. These alerts attempt to identify the same chart patterns as their confirmed counterparts. The primary difference is that these alerts attempt to notify the user as quickly as possible, while the confirmed alerts wait until the chart pattern is clearer. As a trade-off for being notified sooner, the user may receive some false signals.
Very roughly speaking these alerts are on the same time-scale as a one minute chart, and the confirmed versions are on the same time-scale as a 15 minute chart. These alerts pay less attention to volume and rate of price change than the confirmed versions. These alerts pay more attention to the order book and the precise position of support and resistance than the confirmed versions. These alerts are more common than the confirmed versions.
The volume confirmed versions of these alerts require volume confirmed running up or down patterns. These alerts do not require a corresponding running up or down alert. These alerts include analysis very similar to the analysis used by the running up and down alerts. These alerts can be triggered much more quickly than a running up or down alert.
More options related to these alerts are listed below.