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A bullish Balanced Price Range by definition is a portion of price action that has delivered
buyside -> sell side and then buyside again.
To put it simply, a Bullish RDRB is price delivered UP, DOWN & UP AGAIN.
A bearish Balanced Price Range by definition is a portion of price action that has delivered sell
side -> buyside and then sell side again.
To put it simply, a Bearish RDRB is price delivered DOWN, UP & DOWN AGAIN.
Let’s look at the picture above. First, let’s consider the right side of the picture. So, we have this
first candle going up and it offers buy side making that wick up. Then offers sell side again going
all the way down. What happened inside this wick? It offered buy side and sell side, right? With
the next candle open, it offers buy side once again. Once again, we think about simplicity... It is
up, down, and then next candle up again. So, this piece (first candle) of price action has been
fully balanced.
Then if this occurs and price action starts to trade back into this range again it is already a
balanced price range. Makes sense?
If there is a bullish FVG below this RDRB, ideally, we want this FVG to remain open.
Same for a bearish Rebalanced Redelivered price area. First it offers a sell side. Then goes back
up all the way again. So, what does it do when it goes back up again? It offers a buy side. And
then with the next candle we have sell side offered once again.
Again, quick reminder, think about that simplicity down, up, and then down again.
It can occur when price gaps create a vacuum of trading, resulting in an actual price gap.
Now, how does regular RDRB look like with a price action chart?
The FVG will stay open because there is a balanced price range above/below it.
We can also use this as a PD array on its own, so it does not need to have a FVG above or below
it to be used. This PD array is defined as a redelivered rebalanced.