TimelessMarket Theory
Educational only — not financial advice. The example below is illustrative, not a recommendation. Intraday trading carries high risk and most day traders lose money. Always define your risk and test any process yourself before risking money.
Strategy Playbook · Intraday

The VWAP Scalp

Take quick, tight-risk trades off price's reaction at VWAP — the intraday benchmark large players measure themselves against.

Method from → Brian Shannon (AlphaTrends) · Concepts: VWAP & Anchored VWAP · Glossary: Scalping

TypeScalp
BiasLong or short
Timeframe1 min
StyleScalp (seconds–minutes)

1 The Edge — why it works

Trading the institutional benchmark

VWAP — the volume-weighted average price — is the line institutions use to judge whether they are buying or selling at a good price, which makes it a magnet and a decision point intraday.

Price repeatedly reacts at VWAP: a reclaim after a dip often resumes the uptrend; a rejection from below often confirms weakness. Because the line gives an objective, nearby level to risk against, VWAP reactions offer high-frequency, tight-risk scalps for traders who can act quickly and take small, defined losses.

2 Where it works — and doesn't

Liquid names with a clean VWAP

Works best when…

  • A liquid stock with a clear intraday trend.
  • Price is interacting cleanly with VWAP (not far from it).
  • A reclaim/rejection comes with a pickup in volume.
  • Tight spreads so small moves are tradable after costs.

Fails / avoid when…

  • A choppy, rangebound day where VWAP is just noise.
  • Illiquid names with wide spreads that eat scalp profits.
  • Price is extended far from VWAP (no edge, poor risk).
  • Around major scheduled news that whipsaws the line.

3 Setup checklist

All true before you act

4 The process

From signal to managed trade

1

Entry

Enter as price reclaims VWAP from below (long) — or rejects it from below (short) — in the trend's direction.

2

Stop (1R)

Just on the other side of VWAP. If price closes back through the line, the scalp is wrong. Entry − stop = 1R.

1R = entry − stop
3

Position size

Risk a small fixed % of the account; shares = risk ÷ 1R. Scalps use tight stops, so size can be larger — but keep total risk fixed.

shares = (account × risk%) ÷ 1R
4

Exit & management

Scalps are quick: take +1R to +2R into the next minor level, or trail a tight stop. Don't turn a scalp into an investment.

5 Worked example (illustrative)

One trade, start to finish, in R

VWAP Scalp — reclaim of the volume-weighted average price103.8102.6101.3100.1stop · below VWAP −1RVWAPEntry ▲ VWAP reclaim+2–3R scalp
Illustrative. Price dips to VWAP and reclaims it on a pickup in volume (entry); the stop sits just below VWAP (−1R), and the scalp targets the next minor level for a quick +2–3R.
Account / risk per trade$25,000 · 0.5% = $125
Entry (VWAP reclaim)$101.20
Stop (below VWAP) — 1R$100.50 · 1R = $0.70/share
Position size = $125 ÷ $0.70≈ 178 shares
Scalp target (+2R)$102.60
If it works: +2R+ $250 (≈ +1.0%)
If it fails: −1R− $125 (≈ −0.5%)

6 Honest expectancy

Many small trades, strict discipline

Scalping lives or dies on costs and discipline: tiny edges are erased by wide spreads, slippage, and oversized losers. The math only works with tight, honored stops and quick exits.

expectancy (in R) = (win% × avg win) − (loss% × avg loss)

Example: win 55% at +1.5R, lose 45% at −1R → (0.55 × 1.5) − (0.45 × 1) = +0.38R per trade — before costs, which matter enormously here. An expectation, never a guarantee.

7 Make it yours

Test before you trade

A no-risk validation routine

Add VWAP to a 1-minute chart and replay liquid, trending names. Mark each VWAP reclaim/rejection, your entry, the across-VWAP stop, and the quick result in R — and subtract realistic spread and commission. Only the names and conditions that survive costs belong in your playbook.

8 Common mistakes

How traders blow this up