An old adage says "price tells you what, volume tells you why." Price can move on tiny turnover, but volume reveals how much capital stands behind the move. In trend following, reading volume is the key skill for separating real trends from fake ones.
Accumulation and distribution — the footprints of big money
Institutions move in size, so they buy and sell across days or weeks. That leaves a signature in volume.
- Accumulation: volume swells on up days and shrinks on down days — big money is leading the advance and building a position.
- Distribution: volume swells on down days while up days are limp — big money is offloading into the highs.
The same 5% gain means very different things on triple-average volume versus no volume. The former is evidence of accumulation; the latter can be a hollow move made by a handful of buyers.
Why volume is decisive on a breakout
When a stock clears a new high or pivot in a breakout, volume is the litmus test of authenticity. A breakout on clearly elevated volume means many participants agreed on the price and tends to follow through. A breakout that drifts over the high on no volume is prone to failing back as a fake breakout.
In a pullback, volume should "dry up"
Interestingly, it’s the opposite during consolidation. When a trending stock pulls back, shrinking volume is the healthy sign — there are no sellers left. That’s why the VCP treats drying volume as a core requirement. If volume stays heavy through a pullback, it may not be a simple dip but distribution.
Reading volume with relative strength
Volume is most powerful alongside relative strength (RS). A high-RS name that leads the market while volume expands on up days is a top-tier candidate — strength and accumulation confirmed together. Each stock’s chart in Trend Screener shows volume bars, so after screening for RS leaders you can overlay volume to find names under active accumulation. The liquidity filter (50-day average volume ≥ 500K) also lets you view only actively traded names.