Death Cross in a Bull's Den β Three Charts, One StoryNifty 50 IndexNSE:NIFTYAveroy_Apoorv_Analysisπ§ This is a multi-layout TradingView configuration β the daily timeframe chart occupies the full left panel, while the right panel is split into two: the weekly timeframe on top and the monthly timeframe below. Together, these three charts form a coherent, top-down view of the market structure without relying on any single signal in isolation. The power of this approach is confluence through timeframe layering. β What Is a Death Cross? A Death Cross is a bearish technical signal that occurs when a shorter-period moving average crosses below a longer-period moving average. In this analysis, we are watching the 50-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) cross below the 200-day EMA on the daily timeframe. Traditionally, this crossover signals a potential shift in momentum from bullish to bearish β the market has been losing short-term strength relative to its longer-term average β‘ Key Observation β The Bull Context Reversal When a Death Cross forms within an active bullish uptrend β rather than at the beginning of a downtrend β it tends to behave very differently. Instead of launching the market lower, the price action frequently gets suctioned back toward the EMA bundle. The death cross in this scenario acts more like a magnet than a trapdoor. β‘ The weekly chart in the top-right panel shows the broader candle structure of the market alongside its own 200 EMA. On this timeframe, the full character of the trend becomes clearer β the daily noise compresses into meaningful weekly candles that paint a more honest picture of buyer and seller control. β‘ The monthly chart occupies the bottom-right panel, providing the highest available timeframe perspective. Here, individual candles represent an entire month of price action. The 50 EMA on the monthly is a formidable level. It is not frequently tested, and when price approaches it, it represents a macro decision point that institutional and long-term participants are watching closely. Disclaimer: This post is purely for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, trading advice, or any other form of professional advice. The analysis presented reflects a technical observation on General Trends of chart patterns and moving averages and should not be interpreted as a forecast, prediction, or recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any financial instrument or asset.