The biggest lie about weekly SFPs is that you’re supposed to wait for the weekly close to trade them.
If you do that, you’re not trading - you’re doing a post mortem recap. By the time a weekly SFP is “confirmed” the highest R:R part of the move is already gone. You’re late, your stop is wider, and you’re entering with hindsight, not edge like a lot of these influencers love to sell to you.
A Swing Failure Pattern is just price behaviour. It shows where liquidity was taken not who’s in control after the fact. That’s why people love posting SFPs once the move is over. It looks smart, but it doesn’t teach you execution and it definitely doesn’t help you make a real time decision.
Markets don’t reverse because of candles. They reverse because positioning flips.
At higher timeframe inflection points, you shouldn’t be staring at wicks - you should already be mapped into liquidity structures: order blocks, breaker blocks and fair value gaps (imbalances). These aren’t patterns, they’re areas where large players previously transacted. Think potential risk flip zones, but also not guaranteed reversals.
So the real question isn’t did a weekly SFP form... it’s is the market accepting higher prices or rejecting them?
That answer doesn’t come from candlesticks. This is where lower-timeframe order flow matters. When price sweeps a key HTF level, you drop down and look at what’s happening under the hood.
If price pushes higher and open interest expands aggressively, that usually means new positions are being added - that’s often continuation, even if a wick forms.
If price sweeps liquidity and open interest stalls or starts dropping, that’s a sign positions are being closed or trapped. That’s where real reversals begin.
CVD adds another layer. If price is making higher highs but CVD is flat or falling, buyers are being absorbed. Market buys are hitting, but price isn’t moving cleanly. That’s weakness, not strength.
When you see liquidity taken, order flow failing to support continuation and lower timeframe structure starting to shift - that’s how you trade a “weekly SFP” before the week closes. An SFP is not a setup: it’s market context. Without liquidity zones, order flow and lower timeframe confirmation, it’s just hindsight content.
It doesn’t teach traders how to be bullish or bearish - it teaches them how to circle a candle after the move already happened.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
The biggest lie about weekly SFPs is that you’re supposed to wait for the weekly close to trade them.
If you do that, you’re not trading - you’re doing a post mortem recap. By the time a weekly SFP is “confirmed” the highest R:R part of the move is already gone. You’re late, your stop is wider, and you’re entering with hindsight, not edge like a lot of these influencers love to sell to you.
A Swing Failure Pattern is just price behaviour. It shows where liquidity was taken not who’s in control after the fact. That’s why people love posting SFPs once the move is over. It looks smart, but it doesn’t teach you execution and it definitely doesn’t help you make a real time decision.
Markets don’t reverse because of candles. They reverse because positioning flips.
At higher timeframe inflection points, you shouldn’t be staring at wicks - you should already be mapped into liquidity structures: order blocks, breaker blocks and fair value gaps (imbalances). These aren’t patterns, they’re areas where large players previously transacted. Think potential risk flip zones, but also not guaranteed reversals.
So the real question isn’t did a weekly SFP form... it’s is the market accepting higher prices or rejecting them?
That answer doesn’t come from candlesticks. This is where lower-timeframe order flow matters. When price sweeps a key HTF level, you drop down and look at what’s happening under the hood.
If price pushes higher and open interest expands aggressively, that usually means new positions are being added - that’s often continuation, even if a wick forms.
If price sweeps liquidity and open interest stalls or starts dropping, that’s a sign positions are being closed or trapped. That’s where real reversals begin.
CVD adds another layer. If price is making higher highs but CVD is flat or falling, buyers are being absorbed. Market buys are hitting, but price isn’t moving cleanly. That’s weakness, not strength.
When you see liquidity taken, order flow failing to support continuation and lower timeframe structure starting to shift - that’s how you trade a “weekly SFP” before the week closes. An SFP is not a setup: it’s market context. Without liquidity zones, order flow and lower timeframe confirmation, it’s just hindsight content.
It doesn’t teach traders how to be bullish or bearish - it teaches them how to circle a candle after the move already happened.