Price Action Suite & Swing Suite
Combining Price Action Suite with Swing Suite pairs institutional context with market structure — the Context + Structure foundation of the TRN Trading System. Price Action Suite reveals where institutional participants have left their footprint through fair value gaps, order blocks, and key session levels. Swing Suite maps the structural framework: swing trends define direction, swing points define turning points, and divergences flag momentum shifts. When both indicators agree, you know both where to look and what the market structure supports at that location.
Be sure to check out our Price Action Suite section and the Swing Suite section to fully understand how each indicator works independently before combining them.
Workflow 1: Trend-Aligned Context Zones​
The primary workflow uses Swing Suite trend direction as a filter, then identifies Price Action Suite zones that align with the structural trend.
How It Works​
- Add both Price Action Suite and Swing Suite to your chart
- Determine the swing trend direction — is the market making higher swing highs and higher swing lows (bullish) or lower swing highs and lower swing lows (bearish)?
- In a bullish swing structure, only trade demand zones: bullish fair value gaps and bullish order blocks
- In a bearish swing structure, only trade supply zones: bearish fair value gaps and bearish order blocks
- Use Price Action Suite key levels for precise target placement — previous day high/low, session boundaries, current week open
This workflow prevents the common mistake of trading valid context zones against the prevailing market structure. A bullish order block in a bearish swing trend may produce a bounce, but the structural odds are against a sustained move.
Workflow 2: Divergence at Context Zones​
This workflow adds Swing Suite divergence as a confirmation layer when price reaches a Price Action Suite zone.
How It Works​
- Identify a Price Action Suite supply or demand zone (FVG or order block)
- When price enters the zone, check for Swing Suite divergence:
- Supply zone → look for bearish divergence (price makes a higher high, oscillator makes a lower high) confirming exhaustion
- Demand zone → look for bullish divergence (price makes a lower low, oscillator makes a higher low) confirming seller exhaustion
- Divergence at a context zone provides dual confirmation: the institutional level is being tested, and momentum is shifting at that test
- No divergence at the zone? The setup still works, but with less confirmation — consider reducing position size
Why This Works​
Fair value gaps and order blocks represent price levels where institutional activity previously occurred. Divergence represents a measurable shift in momentum. When both converge — price reaches an institutional zone and momentum confirms a turn — the probability of a meaningful reaction increases substantially compared to either signal alone.
Workflow 3: Dual-Layer Support and Resistance​
Use both indicators together to build a more complete map of significant price levels.
How It Works​
- Enable Price Action Suite levels: previous day high/low, session high/low, current week open, and other key references
- Enable Swing Suite support and resistance from swing point clusters
- Look for confluence zones where Price Action Suite levels align with Swing Suite support/resistance
- These confluence areas carry more weight for entries, exits, and stop placement
- When market structure break of structure levels align with Swing Suite swing points, the resulting level is particularly significant
The highest-confidence setups stack three elements: a swing trend direction, a context zone (FVG or order block) aligned with that trend, and divergence confirming the momentum shift at the zone. This triple confluence is the hallmark of the Context + Structure framework.
FAQ​
How do Price Action Suite and Swing Suite complement each other?​
Price Action Suite provides the institutional context — fair value gaps, order blocks, key levels, and sessions show where smart money has acted. Swing Suite reveals market structure — swing trends, swing points, and divergences show what the market is doing structurally. Together, they answer both where to focus and what the market structure supports at that location.
How does Swing Suite divergence help at Price Action Suite zones?​
When price reaches a fair value gap or order block, Swing Suite divergence provides a secondary confirmation layer. Bearish divergence at a supply zone confirms that buying momentum is weakening, supporting a short entry. Bullish divergence at a demand zone confirms seller exhaustion, supporting a long entry. Divergence at a context zone is stronger than divergence in isolation.
Should I prioritize Swing Suite trend direction or Price Action Suite zones?​
Use Swing Suite trend direction as your first filter — it determines whether you look for long or short setups. Then use Price Action Suite zones to identify specific entry areas within that trend direction. A bullish swing trend combined with a bullish FVG or order block is a high-confluence setup. Trading context zones against the swing trend reduces probability significantly.
Can Swing Suite support/resistance replace Price Action Suite levels?​
They serve different purposes and work best together. Price Action Suite levels are session-based and time-anchored (previous day high/low, session boundaries, current week open). Swing Suite support/resistance is derived from swing point clusters and price structure. When both align at the same price area, that level carries significantly more weight as a target or decision point.