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Price Action Methodology

Wyckoff Theory

Master the art of reading institutional footprints through Wyckoff methodology. Understand accumulation, distribution, and trade with smart money.

4
Market Phases
10
Wyckoff Events
Multiple
Trading Setups
Key
Volume Logic
Wyckoff Events

Buying Climax (BC)

Excessive buying near the end of an uptrend

What It Is

The Buying Climax is the opposite of the Selling Climax. It occurs at the end of an uptrend when euphoria reaches its peak. Retail traders pile in, afraid to miss out on more gains. Smart Money uses this demand to distribute their positions. The BC is characterized by strong bullish candles, often with gaps up, on extremely high volume. It looks exciting—which is exactly why retail buys and professionals sell. The key insight: When everyone is buying in excitement, someone has to be selling. That seller is usually Smart Money, quietly offloading positions they accumulated at lower prices.

Buying Climax (BC) - Visual

BC Uptrend Buying Climax (BC) • Excessive buying at highs • Extremely high volume • Smart Money distributes • Marks potential end of uptrend HIGH VOL Decline begins

Price Behavior

  • Strong bullish candles with wide spread
  • Price overextends from any moving average
  • Often creates a spike high
  • May gap up on excitement
  • Closes near the highs of the session

Volume Behavior

  • Extremely high volume—often the highest in the entire uptrend
  • Professional selling absorbs retail buying
  • Volume spike confirms climactic action
  • Subsequent candles may show declining volume

What It Means

  • Retail traders are buying aggressively
  • Smart Money begins distribution
  • Marks the potential end of the uptrend
  • Creates the ceiling for the trading range

Not every high-volume up day is a Buying Climax. True BC requires context—it must occur after an extended uptrend and should be followed by an Automatic Reaction.