Timing Model for Stocks, ETFs, Crypto & Forex
Check whether a breakout is setting up, confirming, failing, or slipping into chop — with breakout status, fakeout risk, direction bias, and trend continuation in one timing read.
Run Analysis
Chart
See whether a breakout still deserves respect
Timing Model helps you judge whether price action still looks like a valid setup, a constructive retest, a confirmed move, a weakening breakout, or a range-bound trap. It turns noisy structure into a cleaner timing read: whether conditions support patience, caution, or stronger directional conviction.
When traders use Timing Model
Timing Model is most useful when you already have a chart in mind and need a cleaner read on whether the breakout still deserves respect.
Validate a fresh breakout before entry
Check whether the move looks like a credible trigger or an early fakeout before acting.
Review a post-breakout retest
See whether a retest still looks constructive or whether the structure is beginning to fail.
Reject range-bound charts that look better than they are
Filter out symbols where chop, weak confirmation, or elevated fakeout risk reduce timing quality.
Compare timing quality across symbols you already track
Run the same timing lens across your shortlist to see which setups deserve closer attention.
How to read the Timing Model
Timing Model is not a generic signal box. It helps you classify where price sits in the breakout lifecycle—early setup, trigger, retest, confirmation, failure, or range. Instead of reconciling dozens of raw cues by hand, you get a faster timing read: whether conditions support conviction, caution, or patience.
Frame the setup
Start with breakout status: is this a setup, trigger, retest, confirmation, failure, or range-bound chop? That single frame keeps the chart story organized.
Judge confirmation vs failure
Layer direction bias and trend integrity on top. A bullish bias can still accompany failed breakouts, elevated fakeout risk, or messy range behavior.
Sanity-check continuation
Use the probability-style read on continuation, fakeout risk, and range/chop to decide whether the lifecycle story still hangs together.
What the timing read is checking
Timing Model is not just asking whether price moved. It checks whether the breakout lifecycle still looks coherent, fragile, or noisy.
Breakout confirmation
Higher values suggest the breakout has a better chance of holding rather than being given back quickly.
Fakeout risk
Higher values flag breakout attempts that may fail or reverse after only shallow follow-through.
Range / chop
Higher values point to noisier, less directional conditions where timing quality is weaker.
Trend continuation
Higher values suggest the broader directional move may still persist beyond the breakout moment.
BB width % and ATR %
These help frame whether conditions look compressed, active, quiet, or too volatile for clean continuation.
Distance to breakout
Shows whether price is still inside range, cleanly above the level, or below the level rather than truly breaking out.
Continue your research with the rest of the TSL stack
Timing Model classifies entry context. Pair it with durability, macro regime, and risk scenarios when you need the next layer of validation.
TSL Timing Model FAQ
Quick answers on what the tool measures, how to read it, and which symbols it supports.
What is the Timing Model?
The Timing Model is a breakout and market-structure analysis tool. It helps you see whether a market is setting up, confirming, failing, or trading in range—using ideas like breakout status, direction bias, trend integrity, fakeout risk, and trend continuation.
What does breakout status mean?
Breakout status describes where price sits in the breakout process—for example setup, triggered, retest, confirmed, or failed.
What is the difference between breakout direction and direction bias?
Breakout direction reflects the current breakout attempt. Direction bias reflects the broader trend background. They can align or diverge.
What does fakeout risk mean?
Fakeout risk measures how likely an apparent breakout is to fail rather than continue with follow-through.
What does trend continuation mean?
Trend continuation estimates whether the broader directional move is more likely to persist.
What markets can I analyze?
The Timing Model supports stocks (e.g. AAPL), ETFs (e.g. SPY), crypto (e.g. BTC-USD), and forex (e.g. EURUSD=X)—one consistent framework across them.
Is the Timing Model beginner-friendly?
Yes. The output is meant to simplify chart reading by translating multiple inputs into a clearer market-structure view.
Is the Timing Model only for beginners?
No. Advanced users often use it for watchlist filtering, breakout review, context analysis, and faster cross-market comparisons.
Is Timing Model financial advice?
No. Timing Model is a research and educational tool that helps you evaluate breakout context, fakeout risk, direction bias, and continuation quality. It does not tell you what to buy or sell.