The Volatility Contraction Pattern (VCP): How To Day Trade With It

The Volatility Contraction Pattern, or VCP, as it has come to be known, has been popularized by Mark Minervini in his books Think and Trade Like a Champion and Trade Like a Stock Market Wizard. Despite the pattern’s success for swing trading, in this post we’ll dive into how to recognize it for day trading opportunities.

History of the Volatility Contraction Pattern

The VCP, which dates back to Richard D. Wyckoff’s “wave pattern,” carries a high rate of success when executed properly. It essentially looks like a bull flag.

Many successful traders may refer to the pattern as simply a “high tight flag.” However, that pattern implies certain criteria that may not fit the VCP.

Regardless, the setup has obvious influence from the teachings of Bill O’Neil and his famous book How to Make Money in Stocks.

Volatility Contraction Pattern (VCP) drawing explanation

What Minervini discovered in his analysis of some of the market’s biggest winners was their tendencies to pause during new uptrends. This pause created a coiling action after the initial upward force. It also offered a low-risk opportunity to jump onboard for the next leg up.

“I stuck with the same style and strategy for so many years that I got really good at doing that one thing. I was doing the same exact thing I’m doing now — looking for stocks that are in strong uptrends that are coming out of consolidations.”[efn_note]mark_minervini_raked_in_a_33554_return_over_5_years_using_a_simple_stock_tr.[/efn_note]

Mark Minervini

Regardless of the amalgamation of educators putting their own influence on the pattern, it has a handful of shared criteria for qualification. We’ll look at each one of these more in-depth in a moment.


Why the Volatility Contraction Pattern?

When analyzing different patterns or setups in the market, it is imperative to manage risk. It is equally important to have an edge.

Successful traders understand that the market is a game of probabilities. Losses are inevitable. But an edge that provides a higher reward/risk ratio can bring about obscene profits over time.

You have no control over how much a stock goes up, but you can, however, control the amount you lose on each trade.

Mark Minervini

This is where the VCP shines. It offers traders the ability to take a position in a stock with growing momentum, yet with low risk.

Just ask Mark who touts making over 33,554% in just 5 years using only the VCP.

To that end, let’s look at each of the 5 criteria that creates this explosive pattern.

What is the Volatility Contraction Pattern?

The Volatility Contraction Pattern Criteria:Strong Underlying Demand Recent Overbought/Supply pressure Diminishing supply characteristics Decreasing volatility Explosive breakout

1. Strong Underlying Demand

For a stock to create the proper setup for the VCP, there needs to be demand. Plain and simple. And a lot of it.

To that point, there is no easier way to spot that demand than a strong uptrend. This may seem counterintuitive to human nature, but the best VCP patterns come from big prior moves.

It is at this point that many investors or traders feel as though a stock is overbought. However, astute momentum traders recognize the demand and take advantage of it. This is a classic example of buying high and selling higher.

The following are a handful of flexible criteria to look for in the foundation of an intraday VCP. Think of these as the backdrop to the formation.

  1. A premarket gap or explosive move off the open
  2. Elevated Relative Volume compared to prior days’ average
  3. The potential for a breakout on higher time frames
  4. Underlying significant support (like a daily pivot or moving average)
  5. Inability to breakdown

Volatility Contraction Pattern Example – WISH

Taking these 5 points, let’s use a recent intraday VCP example in a strong-trending ticker, WISH.

Starting with the daily chart, we can begin building our case for the “daily pivot” and “moving average” support markers. In the image below, we see that we had an extremely bullish day a few weeks prior.

WISH daily volatility contraction pattern
WISH daily support levels

We can also see that the ticker is now “surfing” the 10-day simple moving average. Each time it retreats to those levels, volume recedes. This implies that supply is diminishing on the daily chart.

From this daily back drop, let’s move a bit closer using the 30-minute time frame.

On the 30-minute chart, we see confirmation of the price action holding higher lows. The volatility begins to contract into the current day, suggesting an inability for price to break down.

Wish 30-minute chart volatility contraction pattern
WISH 30-minute chart

Now that we have the higher time frames analyzed, let’s look for the intraday action.

Pre-market Gap

In the following chart, we can see the prior day high, close, and the after hours and pre-market action from the current morning for WISH.

WISH premarket VCP
WISH premarket gap

Though volume is not shown, RVOL was above 100% for that morning with over 5 million shares traded in the premarket. Just before the open at 9:30am EST, the ticker is already testing its prior day’s high. This is annotated on the chart.

With this in mind, we’d be wise to keep WISH on watch for any kind of setup that might indicate an imminent breakout.

2. Recent Overbought/Supply Pressure

Given the 6% gap in the premarket for WISH, and the fact that it is retesting the prior day highs, it wouldn’t be surprising for some amount of profit taking or selling pressure off the open. This is a common area to take profits in case the breakout fails.

What this creates is an underlying compression, of sorts. It is like two opposing forces trying to overcome each other. Demand on the one hand, supply on the other.

Our job as traders is to identify who has the upper hand in the battle. The Volatility Contraction Pattern helps with this.

To see how this plays out as a day trade, let’s take a snapshot of WISH shortly after the open.

WISH intraday volatility contraction pattern
WISH intraday VCP

We’ve drawn a line at the prior day’s high for a better understanding of how important this level is. We noticed from the premarket chart that resistance was showing up at this pivot. So, it makes sense to include these key levels.

As the morning wears on, it becomes clear that the stock is not breaking down. In fact, the supply injected at the resistance line is being absorbed on dips.

3. Diminishing Supply / Decreasing Volatility

After we see the “overbought” correction, we need to watch closely to how the stock reacts. Does it find support again? If so, where, and how convincingly?

These are questions that need to be answered with volume and price action.

Per the notes on the chart, we begin to see “the wave” tightening with higher lows. Each pullback contains less and less volume/supply.

Finally, we coil into an area of tight price action on extreme volume dry up[efn_note]https://gilmoreport.com/education/gilmo-glossary/#:~:text=A%20voodoo%20(Gilmo%20slang%20for,top%20of%20a%20prior%20base.[/efn_note].

Volume Dry Up (VDU), is a popular way of finding lack of supply in a healthy consolidation. This price action strategy often precedes a “pocket pivot,” or break out. These strategies were popularized by Gil Morales and Chris Kacher in their book Trade Like an O’Neil Disciple.

Ideally, at this point in the consolidation, you want to see the stock holding a support level like VWAP or a popular moving average like the 10, 20, or 50ma.

WISH with 20ema, 50sma, and VWAP

As the stock consolidates into the Volatility Contraction Pattern, we begin to see the influential support indicators like the 20ema, 50sma, and VWAP have moved below the price action. This is yet another red flag for short-biased traders to run for cover. No pun intended.

4. The Breakout

As the force of demand begins to overpower the bears, it becomes clear that bulls are going to win. And as we mentioned above, this can be explosive depending on the pressure being exerted by the bears.

The initial sign is the high volume bullish price bar immediately following the VDU candle. After finding support along the 20ema, the price pivots higher on convincing volume.

Volume returns with a vengeance after the tight coiling action. Breakout buyers are jumping on the opportunity. At the same time, shorts have a decision to make. Either cover before the loss gets worse, or average up, hoping for a failed breakout.

WISH VCP breakout
WISH VCP breakout

As the breakout continues higher, shorts are now underwater, especially if they were averaged in from the prior day high. They have only one choice to make.

As the short covering comes in, this fuels the bullish character of the stock. In fact, in less than two hours, the stock ran over 13%.

Swing traders would love to have those kind of gains in a month!

VCP Variations and More Resources

While there are plenty of swing trading resources on the net for VCPs, there are fewer links to daytraders employing this strategy. The exception is Nate Michaud of InvestorsUnderground.com.

Nate teaches a variation of this strategy called the ABCD pattern in many of his free educational videos. If you have time, you might check out his YouTube channel for more information on how to spot these intraday opportunities.

How to Practice the VCP

Once you’ve seen the VCP, it is imperative to practice the pattern in a simulator before putting real money to work. You’ll want to identify when the pattern works, and when it might throw false signals. After all, flag patterns can resolve either way.

We suggest a few criteria to analyze each trade, similar to what we have mentioned above.

  1. Is the stock holding key moving averages and VWAP?
  2. Are bulls showing signs of strength compared to the bears?
  3. Is volume higher than normal?
  4. Could short-biased traders become trapped?
  5. How close is the stock to support and resistance?
  6. Does supply recede on pullbacks?
  7. Do you get the breakout volume you’d expect to confirm the breakout?
  8. Does the breakout persist or fail?

These are just a handful of criteria you might consider tracking as you spot these setups and trade them.

Over time, we’d expect you to collect a dataset with enough trades to know your probability on the pattern. Otherwise, you might as well be gambling.

As always, remember to create a trading plan for all your trades. And best of luck!

The Kill Candle

The Kill Candle.

It just sounds menacing, doesn’t it? And for good reason.

If you’ve ever been caught in one on the long side, you understand the pain.

What Is A Kill Candle?

Day trading legend Bao Nguyen, @modern_rock on Twitter as he is known, prefers to call it a death candle. His education service MyInvestingClub covers this candle in a few of his popular shorting courses.

But regardless of what you call it, death candle or kill candle, the result is bloody for bulls.

This pattern has become so notorious that professional day trader @rocketcatchnbob, who airs his trading day live to thousands of viewers, made “kill candle” t-shirts for his followers.

@rocketcatchnbob's kill candle t-shirts
@rocketcatchnbob’s kill candle t-shirts

As transparent as he is, @rocketcatchnbob admits giving up a $100k profit day, settling for $10k after getting caught in one of these red daggers — just to show how brutal these candles can be. His accompanying video is a great tutorial on what to watch out for.

Dangerous little buggers…

Yet for every kill the candle makes, there is always a short trader making a killing on the flip side. And depending on the setup and the skill of the trader, this candle pattern can actually be anticipated.

The Flip Side

As bulls were getting slaughtered on COCP at 2pm that day, someone else was profiting.

COCP kill candle tweet

Fintwit personality @team3dstocks (ADF) is known in the day trading world for his four main low float short setups. We’ll cover a few of them below.

More often than not, they’re centered around the formation of one of these kill candles.

To that point, on this infamous day in May, COCP fit the bill for his 2-3pm “Bloodbath setup.” As ADF likes to say, “it always arrives on time.”

COCP Kill Candle
COCP Kill Candle

Who knew trading could be so scary? 21% of the stock’s value gushing out in a single 1-minute candle.

Such is the world of low float, high volatility momentum trading.

But putting aside the gore, carnage and disappointment, there is a method to the madness here, as with most patterns in the market.

Our goal in this post is to highlight some key characteristics of these candles and uncover three strategies that may help you uncover significant profits if you decide to trade them.

Or, at the very least, learn to anticipate and side step the carnage.

How To Spot One

A kill candle does what you would assume. It kills the upward momentum of a trend at the very least. The best ones reverse the trend in a single candle.

Criteria To Look For In Kill Candles

  1. A large-bodied red candle
  2. High Volume
  3. Bearish engulfing characteristics
  4. Distribution leading up to the candle print
  5. (Usually) a failed breakout attempt

When we say a large-bodied red candle, we don’t mean “just any ‘ol red candle.” We mean something significant — more than likely the most bearish candle on the chart, accompanied by the heaviest (or heavy) volume signature on the chart.

It should look something like these examples:

2-3pm Selloff + Kill Candle:

Here are two examples of the end of day strategy that @team3dstocks uses often. It is also known as a “late day fade”.

COCP Kill Candle
COCP Kill Candle
LEXX 2-3pm bloodbath setup
LEXX 2-3pm bloodbath setup

10am VWAP Boulevard + Kill Candle

We cover this strategy in detail in a different post that is well worth your time. Another one from @team3dstocks, it has a very high success rate when all the criteria are met.

VWAP Boulevard kill candle example
VWAP Boulevard kill candle example

Range Bound Multiple Kill Candles

Not all kill candles will work immediately, as was the case with BLRX. Keep in mind that algorithms, institutions, chat rooms, and deep-pocketed traders can “manipulate” stocks with such low floats.

BLRX Multiple Kill Candles
BLRX Multiple Kill Candles

Sometimes you may see more than one kill candle. BLRX had multiple flushes, and they all occurred at the highs. As with any setup, if the trade recovers, respect your stops.

Kill Candles At The Opening Bell

Opening Bell Kill Candle
Opening Bell Kill Candle

Kill Candles can present themselves at the open as well. Opening Range Breakdowns are a great strategy for the open and can often include a nice kill candle after buyers get stuffed.

As you can see, kill candles can show up just about anywhere. That being said, there are a few caveats when trading this strategy:

  • Kill candles are more predictable and volatile with small caps
  • Larger caps usually require some news or other impetus
  • Without hotkeys, you may have a hard time trading them

The 2-3pm Bloodbath Setup

We’ll take the time now to dig a bit deeper into the setups associated with the kill candle.

No doubt many momentum day traders have probably seen this pattern play out in the afternoon. It goes by a few different names, like “late day faders,” “2-3pm selloff,” or the dramatic “2-3pm bloodbath” popularized by AllDayFaders.

For more info on this, we have a post entirely dedicated to the strategy.

Float and Institutions

Regardless the name, there are a few criteria to consider. The most important being the float size and the shares traded. AllDayFaders notes why this is very important for the strategy:

AllDayFaders talking about late filings

According to ADF, institutions must close their positions before the end of the day, otherwise it is considered a “holding” and has to be filed.

If this is the case, then it makes sense for a proprietary trading firm, hedge fund, or insiders manipulating the float to support the bid up until the bloodbath. Once time is expired, the bid collapses and the fund walks with whatever shares it had, giving it enough time to liquidate down before the close.

It is for this reason that lower float stocks fit the criteria for the pattern as opposed to higher float, larger cap stocks which are harder to manipulate.

Regardless of what institutions are behind the stock movement, the tape doesn’t lie. We can see the footprints leading up to the dump.

What do we mean by that?

Plain and simple. Distribution.

Example

ACY Kill Candle example
ACY Kill Candle example

In this example, we have a low float runner topping out around $16 for the high of the day. With the image we have shown, you can see that major selling pressure came in at the highs (indicated by the circles).

As the day wore on, the big players continued to prop the bid (demand) in order to make the stock look like a squeeze was imminent. Retail traders bought into the dip or covered there shorts. But time runs out, and 3:00pm and 3:11pm marked the last of the uptrend.

The big buyers walked away and the stock retraced half its value in a short amount of time.

We also like to call this “walking the plank.” A lot of the violent drops occur at the pivot line of an ascending lower channel marker. Others might call these bear flags.

For a nice video explanation on this setup, check out professional trader Nate Michaud’s YouTube clip.

The Opening Bell Setup

Kill candles that appear at the open can be great shorting opportunities. The best occur as bulls are pushing the stock higher only to be met with a wall of selling pressure.

In a recent trade on ticker CRSR, we see a perfect example of how bulls were trapped into buying a breakout at the open, only to watch the price immediately reverse.

Opening Bell CRSR kill candle.
Opening Bell CRSR kill candle.

As a trader, you can anticipate the breakdown if you are nimble with a trading platform geared for fast order-entry. The wick above the breakout line on the chart is our indication that price is stalling and distribution is flooding into the heavy buying pressure.

There is so much selling, in fact, that it overwhelms any bullish demand trying to move the stock upward. The result? A kill candle.

To learn more, MyInvestingClub does a great job explaining this type of setup with their free “Death Line” YouTube webinar.

The Chat Pump Exit

In the small world of momentum day trading, there are a lot of influencers on small cap stocks. Just as CNBC, or well-respected analysts might influence the movement of larger cap names, the small cap world has its chat rooms, social media, and other influencers.

chat room example
Example of a day trading chat room

Regardless of where the influence comes from, our goal as traders is to simply be aware of the price action on the chart.

To that point, if a chat room with thousands of retail traders is calling out buying opportunities, you can expect that with a small amount of shares available in low float stocks, you’ll see plenty of movement on the chart.

Sometimes, this can provide underlying demand for successful long plays. Other times, bears are lying in wait for the exhaustion, using the opportunity as a “liquidity event” to initiate large short positions.

And at the end of the day, it is all about who won: supply or demand.

And hopefully, there is enough meat on the bone for everyone to get a win.

Example

VCNX is an example of a stock that was being heavily pumped to its members, starting in the premarket and continuing into the regular session.

VCNX 2/19/2021 VWAP Boulevaard
VCNX Kill Candle at VWAP Boulevard

Admittedly, the bulls had a fantastic run! However, the momentum was eventually exhausted at a prior day’s resistance line we call vwap boulevard, credit to AllDayFaders.

Within seconds of the chat room moderator announcing that he was selling his remaining shares, the bottom fell out of the stock.

VCNX lost 16% of its value in 1 candle. It never recovered that day.

Other Considerations

When trading kill candles, it is important to note that volatility is at an extreme. This may not suit your trading personality or risk profile.

The candles move swiftly, as you can see, and the ability to get filled may be an issue depending on the broker and platform you trade with. Even with specialized trading tools, you may not get filled properly in such a fast-moving environment.

Along the same lines, not all of these securities will be available to short. For that reason, many professional traders use specialized brokers and trading platforms in order to locate shares at a fee.

DAS Short Locate Window
DAS Short Locate Window

Lastly, it is important to note that these are just a few examples. As you study this pattern over time, you’ll find that the more criteria you can find to support your trade plan, the better.

Criteria like daily resistance levels, supply and demand in the Level II, psychological support and resistance, etc., can all all help you with your execution.

How to Practice the Kill Candle

As with any strategy, it is worth practicing until you can’t get it wrong.

Daytrading is risky enough as as seasoned professional. Make sure you know what you’re doing and have a plan for all of your trades.

Once you’ve created a large enough subset of simulated trades to know your success rate, then you might consider putting real money to work in the market.

Until then, stick to a risk-free environment for learning these strategies and protect your hard-earned money. Save the gambling for Vegas.