Why a breakout is not enough: the role of volume, ADX and money flows
One of the most common mistakes in technical analysis is believing a breakout is enough on its own. Price clears resistance, the conditioned reflex fires — valid signal, get in. In reality a breakout alone is worth little: the market is full of apparent breaks that fail immediately.
Support and resistance: how to distinguish real ones from useless ones
Everyone uses support and resistance, but often too loosely: every high becomes a resistance, every low a support, and the chart fills with lines that serve no purpose. The point isn't drawing many levels — it's knowing which ones actually carry operational weight.
VWAP and VWMA: practical differences and when they actually matter
The most common mistake is using them as simple lines to buy or sell on touch. A price touching VWMA in a strong trend is not the same as a price touc
Moving averages: how to use them and what they actually do
Moving averages are among the most used tools in technical analysis — and among the most misread. They're often treated as magic lines that should tell you when to buy or sell on their own. They don't. A moving average doesn't predict the market or generate a trade by itself.
MACD: what it's actually for when working on 1D and 1W
The MACD is one of the most widely known technical indicators, but also one of the most misused. It's often reduced to mechanical interpretation: bullish crossover equals buy, bearish crossover equals sell. In reality, that's not enough — and reducing it to this means losing its true operational val
From experimental adoption to organisational restructuring: AI is transforming work
Le istituzioni confermano una dinamica scomoda: l'IA non sta solo sostituendo lavoro, lo sta polarizzando