To: orkrious who wrote (29937 ) 3/15/2012 7:45:16 AM From: GROUND ZERO™ 2 Recommendations Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224539 Hi, thanks for asking... you can find pretty much everything you want to know about the model I use in the header of this thread, this also includes a good description of the VP which is the Vertical Price... but, below is a copy of the VP definition you will find in the header... respectfully, I suggest you take the time to look over the components in the header so you will have a better understanding of the trading model... Here's the reference on the VP from the thread header, I hope this is helpful...The Vertical Price: A vertical price (VP) is the price of maximum stretch during a rally or a decline. In a down market, there is a price where excessive selling becomes completely exhausted (at least for the meantime) and where buying is mostly likely to enter the market and begin a rally. This vertical price is NOT a target, there is no certainty that the market will actually reach the vertical price. But, if the market in fact hits that vertical price, then I may cover my short position and go long for a quick trade but it is not a buy signal, it's just a warning that the market is extremely oversold and that you should expect a brisk rally from that point. The inverse is also true in an up market. Interestingly enough, the market typically turns around within a few ticks of that vertical price, so it's a highly reliable indicator. On any new buy or sell signal I will also post the new vertical price so we can watch for it in advance. There's never a guarantee that the market would reach any vertical price, but if/when it does, then you can expect a sharp reaction from that price about 95% of the time. These VP's have absolutely nothing to do with gaps or trend lines or with any other technical analysis, it's a completely original phenomenon I discovered during the development of my model. I hope this was helpful...<g> GZ