Low activity is often perceived as a loss of interest in the market. It seems that participants have left, decisions are not being made, and movement is absent. However, this interpretation is not always correct.
A decrease in activity may mean that the main positions have already been established. During such periods, decisions are made without haste and without the need to express oneself through volume and frequency of transactions. Externally, the market appears calm, but the internal structure becomes denser.
An error occurs when activity is considered the main indicator of significance. This causes exits from processes precisely at the moment when the system transitions into the accumulation and preparation phase.
Low activity requires not acceleration, but attention. It indicates a change in market mode, where observing the structure is more important than reacting to superficial signals.

Output:
The silence of volumes does not equal the absence of solutions.
