The Three Pillars of ICC
Every valid ICC move contains three major phases:
A. Indication
This is where price first reveals intent.
This is the moment the market begins to tell you:
“Something has changed here.”
Indication often comes through:
  • break of structure
  • strong displacement
  • aggressive rejection
  • shift in control
  • failure of prior movement
  • liquidity sweep followed by structural response
Indication is the market’s first meaningful statement.
B. Correction
This is the market’s response after the initial reveal of intent.
Correction is not random pullback.Correction is where the market recalibrates after revealing direction.
This phase tests several things:
  • conviction
  • trapped traders
  • late entries
  • patience
  • whether the move was emotional or real
A correction can be:
  • shallow
  • deep
  • orderly
  • violent
  • deceptive
  • prolonged
  • internal
  • externally disruptive
Correction is where many traders lose clarity.
Why?
Because they mistake correction for reversal.Or they enter too early during correction without proof of continuation.
C. Continuation
This is where the market confirms that the indication still has authority after correction.
Continuation is not hope.
Continuation is proof.
It is the market saying:
“Yes, the earlier indication was valid, and I am now ready to continue in that direction.”
This often shows through:
  • break of correction structure
  • renewed displacement
  • reclaim of control
  • failure of counter-move
  • expansion out of pullback
Continuation is where the best ICC entries often live.
Every valid ICC move is built on three core phases: indication, correction, and continuation. Indication is the first moment where price reveals intent, signaling that something in the market has changed. This typically appears through events like a break of structure, strong displacement, aggressive rejection, or a liquidity sweep followed by a clear structural response. It is the market’s first meaningful statement that direction may be shifting.
Following this, correction represents the market’s response after that initial reveal. This is not a random pullback, but a recalibration phase where the market tests conviction, exposes trapped traders, and challenges patience. Corrections can take many forms—shallow or deep, orderly or volatile, brief or prolonged—and this is where many traders lose clarity. They often mistake correction for reversal or enter prematurely without confirmation, leading to poor decisions.
Finally, continuation is where the market confirms that the original indication remains valid after the correction phase. This is not based on hope, but on proof. Continuation typically shows through a break of correction structure, renewed displacement, or a failure of the opposing move. It is the phase where the market reasserts control and expands in the intended direction, and it is also where the highest-quality ICC trade opportunities are most often found.
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R k Taylor
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The Three Pillars of ICC
ICC Lab
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