Time Horizon Analysis: Which Holding Window Fits?
What is time horizon analysis?
Time horizon analysis translates a setup into a practical holding window.
Not every long signal means the same thing: - some ideas are short-term event trades - some are swing setups - some need months to play out
This module answers: how long should this thesis reasonably need?
Typical outputs
| Horizon | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1–7 days | Fast catalyst or event window |
| 2–6 weeks | Swing setup with tactical timing |
| 1–3 months | Medium-term thesis with room to develop |
| 3–12 months | Slower fundamental or valuation-driven idea |
The module can also assign a secondary horizon when a setup has more than one valid window.
What goes into the decision
- catalyst timing
- earnings proximity
- trend strength
- volatility profile
- valuation pace vs. event pace
- market regime
A fast event with strong momentum will usually map to a shorter horizon. A slower valuation reset will usually map to a longer horizon.
Why it matters
Many bad trades are not bad ideas — they are just held on the wrong timeline.
Time horizon analysis reduces that mismatch.
Examples: - a good long idea can fail as a 3-day trade - a strong event setup can be too risky as a 6-month investment
Signal interpretation
| Output | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Long | The timing window supports the bullish thesis |
| Short | The timing window looks unfavorable or fragile |
| Neutral | The holding window does not offer a clean edge |
The key output is not just direction. It is the best horizon fit.
Limitations
- Horizon mapping is probabilistic, not exact
- Events can accelerate or delay the thesis
- Different traders may use the same setup on different timeframes
- Low-liquidity stocks can distort short-term timing
All 13 perspectives -> | Catalyst analysis -> | Risk / scenario -> | Pricing ->