By *Trading Price Action Trends*

Al Brooks Price Action — Complete Trading System Summary

Based on Trading Price Action Trends, Trading Price Action Reversals, Trading Price Action Trading Ranges, and Reading Price Charts Bar by Bar by Al Brooks.


Table of Contents

  1. Core Philosophy
  2. Market Structure: Trends vs Trading Ranges
  3. Bar Types and Candle Patterns
  4. Trend Lines and Channels
  5. Bar Counting: High 1/2/3/4 and Low 1/2/3/4
  6. Breakouts and Failed Breakouts
  7. Trading Ranges
  8. Pullbacks
  9. Reversals
  10. Common Trend Patterns
  11. Entry Rules and Trade Management
  12. Day Trading
  13. Risk Management and Trader's Equation
  14. Key Price Action Principles

1. Core Philosophy

The Market is Institutions

Price Action is Primary

The Only Tool You Need

Key Mentality


2. Market Structure: Trends vs Trading Ranges

The Fundamental Question

Every trader must repeatedly answer: Is the market trending or not trending?

Definitions

Term Definition
Trend A series of price changes that are either mostly up (bull) or down (bear). Contains swings, legs, and pullbacks.
Trading Range Sideways movement where neither bulls nor bears are in control. Minimum: a single bar with a range largely overlapped by the prior bar.
Swing A smaller trend that breaks a trend line; occurs within a larger trend or sideways market.
Leg A small trend that breaks a trend line; part of a larger trend. Can be a pullback or a with-trend move.
Pullback A temporary pause or countertrend move that is part of a trend and does not retrace beyond the start of the trend.

Directional Probability


3. Bar Types and Candle Patterns

Trend Bars

Doji Bars

Reversal Bars

A bull reversal bar in a bear leg:

A bear reversal bar in a bull leg:

Outside Bars

Inside Bars

Other Patterns


4. Trend Lines and Channels

Trend Lines

Trend Channel Lines

Micro Channels

Horizontal Lines


5. Bar Counting: High 1/2/3/4 and Low 1/2/3/4

Definition

A reliable sign that a pullback in a bull trend or trading range has ended: current bar's high extends at least one tick above the high of the prior bar.

Counting System

Label Definition
High 1 First bar with high above prior bar's high in a pullback or near bottom of TR
High 2 After a bar with lower high, next bar with high above prior bar's high
High 3 Third occurrence; usually a wedge bull flag variant
High 4 Fourth occurrence; sometimes a spike and channel pattern
Low 1 First bar with low below prior bar's low in a rally or near top of TR
Low 2 After a bar with higher low, next bar with low below prior bar's low
Low 3 Third occurrence; usually a wedge bear flag variant
Low 4 Fourth occurrence

Trading the Counts

Key Concept

If Low 4 fails (bar extends above high of Low 4 signal bar after Low 4 short is triggered), bears have lost control. Market will become two-sided or bulls take control.


6. Breakouts and Failed Breakouts

Breakout

Breakout Mode

Breakout Pullback

Breakout Test

Failed Breakout (Failed Failure)

Five-Tick Failure


7. Trading Ranges

Definition

Types

Trading Range Behavior

Trading Range to Trend


8. Pullbacks

Definition

Pullback Types

Type Description
Bar pullback In uptrend: bar with low below prior bar's low. In downtrend: bar with high above prior bar's high.
Pullback bar Bar that reverses prior bar by at least 1 tick
EMA pullback Pullback to the moving average
Gap EMA pullback Pullback that results in moving average gap bar
Double bottom bull flag Pause in bull trend with two spikes down to same price, then reverses
Double top bear flag Pause in bear trend with two spikes up to same price, then reverses
Wedge flag Three-push pullback (high 3 or low 3); wedge-shaped

First Pullback Sequence

In a bull trend pullback, price typically descends through these levels:

  1. Minor trendline
  2. EMA
  3. EMA gap (moving average gap bar forms)
  4. Major trendline

Pullback Reliability

High/Low 2 Pullbacks


9. Reversals

Definition

Reversal Types

Type Description
Major trend reversal Bull→bear or bear→bull; requires test of old trend extreme after trend line break
Climactic reversal Spike followed by spike in opposite direction
Wedge reversal Three-push pattern with convergent trend/channel lines; reversing old trend
Expanding triangle Widening price structure; often reverses trends
Double top/bottom pullback Two pushes to same area, followed by deep pullback forming lower high or higher low
Final flag Last pullback before trend exhaustion

Signs of Reversal Strength

Reversal Process

  1. Trend line break (especially major trend line)
  2. Pullback to test old extreme
  3. Test either undershoots or overshoots
  4. Reversal or trend resumption

Failed Reversals


10. Common Trend Patterns

Spike and Channel

Trending Trading Range Days

Trend from the Open

Reversal Day

Trend Resumption Day

Stairs (Broad Channel Trend)

Tight Channels

Three Pushes / Wedges

Double Top/Bottom Patterns


11. Entry Rules and Trade Management

Setups and Signals

Entry Methods

Second Entries

Exit Rules

Order Types


12. Day Trading

Key Times

Opening Patterns

Globex/Premarket/Overnight

Always In Concept

Scalping vsSwing Trading

Time Frames


13. Risk Management and Trader's Equation

The Trader's Equation

Probability of success × Potential reward > Probability of failure × Risk

Risk Principles

Position Sizing

Common Mistakes


14. Key Price Action Principles

Breakout Strength Indicators (Bull)

Signs of Strong Trend

Best Trades (Highest Priority)

  1. Major reversals at support/resistance with strong signal bars
  2. Pullbacks in strong trends with good setups (especially high 2/low 2)
  3. Breakout pullbacks in direction of trend
  4. Second entries after failed first entry

Worst Trades (Avoid)

  1. Countertrend trades in strong trends
  2. Trading tight ranges hoping for breakout
  3. Revenge trading after losses
  4. Trading on news instead of price action
  5. Entry when trader's equation is unclear

Brooks' Rules Summary

  1. Wait for clarity; don't trade if you don't understand
  2. Never use 1-minute chart as primary
  3. Follow your rules; discipline is everything
  4. Only take trades where reward ≥ risk
  5. Focus on best setups; avoid worst ones
  6. Ignore news, experts, indicators
  7. The chart tells you everything you need to know
  8. Think in probabilities; nothing is certain
  9. Patiently wait for setups; don't chase
  10. Keep it simple; less is more

Glossary of Key Terms

Term Definition
Always in Market condition where trend direction is clear; requires spike for confidence
Bar pullback Bar with low below prior bar's low (uptrend); bar with high above prior bar's high (downtrend)
Breakout Price extends beyond prior significance (swing point, trend line, etc.)
Climax Move gone too far too fast; usually followed by TR or reversal
Countertrend Trade opposite to current trend direction
Doji Bar with small/no body; neither bulls nor bears control
Edge Positive trader equation; mathematical advantage
EMA Exponential moving average (20-bar used by Brooks)
Fade Trade opposite to recent move; countertrend
Fractal Every pattern exists on all time frames; micro version of higher frame pattern
HFT High-frequency trading; algorithmic/program trading
Higher time frame (HTF) Chart with fewer bars covering same time (e.g., 15-min vs 5-min)
High 1/2/3/4 Bar counting system for pullbacks in bull trends
Leg Small trend; part of larger trend
Low 1/2/3/4 Bar counting system for pullbacks in bear trends
Micro channel Very tight channel; institutional program trading
Nested Pattern containing smaller version of same pattern
Outside bar Bar encompassing prior bar's range
Overshoot Price extends beyond prior significance
Pullback Countertrend move within trend; temporary pause
Reversal Change to opposite behavior
Reversal bar Trend bar opposite to current trend direction
Scalp Small-profit trade; usually before pullback
Second entry Second setup based on same logic within few bars
Setup Pattern used as basis for entry order
Signal bar Final bar of setup; precedes entry
Spike Strong move in trend direction
Swing Smaller trend; breaks trend lines
Swing high/low Bar that extends beyond neighboring bars
Swing trade Trade held through pullbacks; longer than scalp
Test Price approaches prior significance; can overshoot or undershoot
Trap Entry that immediately reverses; traps traders
Trend Series of price changes mostly in one direction
Trend bar Bar with body; indicates movement in body direction
Trend channel line Line parallel to trend line on opposite side
Trend line Line connecting swing points in trend direction
Undershoot Price approaches but does not reach level
Vacuum Rapid move to "magnet" level due to absent opposition
Wedge Three-push pattern with convergent lines; can be reversal or flag
With trend Trade in direction of current trend

Summary

Al Brooks' price action system is built on these pillars:

  1. Read the chart bar by bar — every bar tells you what institutions are doing
  2. Market is either trending or ranging — your response differs accordingly
  3. Trade with institutional direction — don't fight the smart money
  4. Wait for clear setups — patience and discipline beat rushing
  5. Always satisfy the trader equation — reward must exceed risk
  6. Ignore everything except price — news, indicators, and experts are distractions
  7. Think probabilistically — nothing is certain, but some setups are reliable

The system works because institutions control the market and their cumulative behavior creates patterns that repeat across all time frames and markets. By learning to read these patterns, you canpiggyback on institutional trades with limited risk and high probability of success.