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Volume Profile D-shape, Thin Profiles, and Shape Transitions
Volume Profile D-shape and thin profiles reveal double distributions and exhaustion; reading shape transitions during the session flags trend development early.
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Volume Profile D-shape, Thin Profiles, and Shape Transitions
Beyond the familiar P, b, and bell-curve shapes, two patterns — the D-shape and the thin profile — and the transitions between shapes carry specific tradeable information.
The D-shape (double distribution)
A D-shape shows two distinct volume nodes separated by a low-volume valley — two bell curves stacked vertically. It forms when price establishes value in one band, then drives to a new band and builds a second value area.
Trading rules:
- The valley between the two nodes is an LVN. Price tends to cross it quickly. Trade the break of the valley edge; target the opposite node's POC.
- If price returns to the valley and stalls, the second distribution is failing. Fade back toward the first node.
- A D-shape that closes with the second node larger than the first confirms a genuine shift in value. Trade with the new direction the next session.
The thin profile
A thin profile is narrow vertically with volume concentrated in 3–5 prices. It forms on fast, low-participation drives — news spikes, overnight gaps, thin sessions.
- Thin profiles are unstable. Expect a return to build a fuller value area.
- Do not fade a thin profile in the direction it formed; fade it only after price shows acceptance elsewhere.
- If a thin profile gaps from a prior D-shape node, the LVN between them is the likely magnet.
Shape transitions during the session
The most actionable signal is a shape changing as the session develops:
- Bell curve → D-shape: a balanced session is breaking into a trend. The new upper/lower node marks the new value; buy pullbacks to it.
- P-shape → b-shape: control flipped from buyers to sellers. Short the failure of the P's upper tail.
- D-shape collapsing to bell: the second distribution failed. Reverse toward the original POC.
Practical workflow
At each hour, redraw the developing Volume Profile and label its shape. Compare to the prior hour's shape. A transition at the C or D period (90–120 minutes in) often defines the session's direction. Enter on the transition with a stop beyond the abandoned node; target 2× the node spacing. Shape is a live diagnostic, not a static label — trade the transition, not the snapshot.
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