Been noticing a lot of traders asking about AVL lately, so figured I'd break down how this actually works in practice. The Average Value Line basically tracks where an asset's been trading on average over your chosen timeframe. It's pretty straightforward once you get the concept down.



Here's the thing—when price stays above the AVL, you're typically in an uptrend. When it's sitting below, downtrend territory. That's the basic read. But where it gets useful is at the crossover points. Price coming up through the AVL from below? Classic buy signal setup. Price rolling over through it from above? Sell signal material.

Now, I don't just trade off AVL alone. That would be wild. The real edge comes from layering it with other indicators. Throw RSI in there, check what MACD's doing, maybe add a moving average for confirmation. When multiple signals align at the AVL, that's when you actually have conviction on a trade.

For risk management, I usually set my stops just beyond the AVL line. Long trades, stop goes slightly below it. Short trades, stop sits above. Keeps losses contained when the signal fails.

One thing people miss is that AVL is just one piece. You still need to understand what's actually happening with the asset fundamentals and broader market conditions. Technical setup might look perfect, but if the macro environment is against you, that's a different problem.

Watching some interesting moves in EOS, BERA, and CRV lately. The AVL on those has been giving some pretty clean signals for traders paying attention. Worth keeping an eye on if you're into technical analysis.
BERA0.32%
CRV2.3%
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