Trend Guard
Direction with conviction. Know when every timeframe agrees and when you are trading into a wall.
Three of four timeframes held bullish through the NAS100 gap down on Sunday 20 April. The one that disagreed was the immediate move, not the trend. Trend Guard showed that distinction in real time, before the bounce confirmed it.
The Trade That Should Have Worked
Why most directional losses are not about the entry
Your 5-minute chart says buy. But what does the bigger picture say? If the hourly is pointing down and the daily is flat, that 5-minute buy signal is fighting uphill. Most traders do not check. They see something that looks right on the entry chart, pull the trigger, and then spend the next hour watching it go the wrong way.
The trade looked fine. The entry was clean. The setup ticked the boxes. But it was against the bigger trend, and bigger trends win eventually.
Trend Guard reads direction from the dominant picture all the way down to the immediate move and shows you whether they agree. When they do, you have the weight of the market behind you. When they do not, you know to wait before you commit capital.
What changes when all timeframes agree
What Trend Guard Shows You
Four tools built around one question: is this trade going with the trend or against it?
Multi-timeframe direction at a glance
See the immediate move, the swing direction, and the dominant trend together on one chart. No switching between windows. No piecing together a picture from memory. It is all visible at the same time.
Convergence zones
When channels from different timeframes meet at the same price, that is where the market has maximum agreement. Trend Guard marks these zones. They are where moves accelerate rather than stall, and they are often worth more than any individual entry signal.
Conflict warnings
When timeframes pull in opposite directions, the market is likely to chop. Trend Guard shows you the disagreement before you step into it, so you are not discovering it at the point of loss.
Channel boundaries
Each timeframe has a natural range. When price reaches the edge of a higher-timeframe channel, that is a decision point: continuation or reversal. Trend Guard shows you exactly where those boundaries sit.

What You Actually See
Trend Guard in a trending session versus a choppy one
All three layers point in the same direction. The channel boundaries are clearly defined. Price is inside the dominant trend channel. A convergence zone sits below current price as support.
The reading is unambiguous. The trend is intact. Pull-ins to that convergence zone are buy opportunities, not signs of weakness.
You size up and hold, because the evidence is there.
The immediate direction is up but the swing layer is flat and the dominant trend is pointing down. Trend Guard shows the conflict immediately. The shorter-term move is pushing against a headwind you cannot see on the entry chart alone.
No convergence. Channels are not meeting at any level that matters today.
You reduce size or wait, because the picture is incomplete.
“The big picture and the short-term both point higher. Channels converging at this level. That is where the move accelerates.”
“Short-term is bullish but the bigger trend is flat. This is a range, not a trend. Trade accordingly.”
“Every timeframe just flipped to the same direction. Full alignment. High-conviction setup.”

NAS100 gap down, Sunday 20 April: three timeframes held bullish
On Friday 17 April, NAS100 26,509 was identified as the channel floor support zone. When markets reopened Sunday night, price gapped down 350 points.
Trend Guard showed three of four timeframes holding bullish through the gap. Only the immediate direction flipped short. That distinction matters because when the majority of layers agree and one dissents, the trend is bending, not breaking. The bounce from the gap low confirmed it by Monday afternoon.
The levels and the bias were published before the Sunday open. Not hindsight.
Pricing
Trend Guard is part of the Edge tier
/month
- ✓ Trend Guard (multi-timeframe direction + convergence zones)
- ✓ Regime Guard (market mode classification)
- ✓ Guide (structure and cloud overlay)
- ✓ Market Sentiment (risk-on/off composite)
- ✓ Auction Guard (volume profile and POC)
- ✓ Titan Foundry member library (educational series)
Pairs Well With
Trend Guard works standalone. Combined with the below, it is part of a complete picture.
Structure and cloud overlay. Trend Guard tells you the direction; Guide shows you the structural levels where that direction matters.
Market mode classification. Regime Guard tells you which playbook fits the current conditions. Use it alongside Trend Guard to confirm whether the trend signal deserves a full position.
Multi-factor confluence signals with entry, stop, and target. The Guardian uses directional context in its conviction read. Trend Guard makes that read sharper.
Built for Every Level
Trend Guard is useful the first time you load it and more useful every month after.
New to timeframe analysis
You have been looking at one chart at a time and wondering why your entries keep getting reversed. Trend Guard shows you the bigger picture immediately. You see the disagreement that was killing your trades before you placed them.
Experienced but inconsistent
You know about higher timeframes but you check them manually and inconsistently. Trend Guard removes the manual step. When it shows full alignment, you size up with conviction. When it shows conflict, you reduce before the market teaches you the same lesson at a cost.
Profitable and looking for edge
You want to use convergence zones as position-sizing triggers, not just directional filters. When all layers align at a specific level, that is where you add. Trend Guard makes those zones visible and removes the subjectivity from that decision.
Frequently Asked Questions
Straight answers.
Stop fighting the bigger picture. Trade with it.
Trend Guard is part of Edge at £109/month. Includes the full Edge suite.
Titan Protect tools are for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing on this page constitutes financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any instrument. Trading carries significant risk of loss. Past results, including any case studies shown, do not guarantee future performance. You are responsible for your own trading decisions.