Anatomy Of A Trade Using Fibonacci Price Analysis

Fibonacci
price analysis can be an extremely powerful
trading tool, if used
correctly.

The typical argument against using
Fibonacci price relationships to trade is that levels can be projected all over
the place — confusing traders as to which level or area to execute the trade
against. In this lesson, we are going to focus on how we choose the appropriate
levels to execute a trade against.

The first example walks through a
relatively recent trade setup against a price cluster
zone.

Price
clusters are the first and most powerful way to use this type of price analysis.
The definition of a price cluster zone is when the coincidence of three or
more Fibonacci price relationships come together within a relative tight range.

Let’s start with an example in the
December Nasdaq futures contract
(
NDZ0 |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating)
.
We are looking at the high
that was made on Nov. 15 at the 3155 level. First, if we go back in
time to this price cluster setup, we saw a healthy confluence of price
relationships between the 3153-3180 area. This zone included the .618
retracement
of the 3400 high to the 2755 low, the 50%
retracement
of the 3558 high to the 2755 low, along with the 100%
price projection
of the 2975 low to the 3400 high projected from the
2755 low.

At that time, the Nasdaq 100 contract
was trading straight up into the 3153-3180 area. Did we just want to sell into
this zone and HOPE the market stalled? Probably not. It would have worked
in this case, but there are of course times when a cluster will be violated, so
it is worth waiting for confirmation of a
price reversal before entering a trade against one of these price
cluster zones.

Let’s take a look at what might have confirmed
a reversal and told us to execute a trade against the 3155-3180 zone.
First note that this coincidence of price relationships was defined projecting
from key highs and lows obvious on the daily chart. If you used the daily
data to confirm a change in trend and just waited for the low of the previous
day to be taken out, you would not have seen a sell trigger until the 3020 level
was violated. Now that’s a long time to wait for confirmation, though this type
of entry is still valuable if you are a longer-term trader.

Most of us have no patience, however,
so we would want to take it down to a lower time frame than the one that we
projected the Fibonacci price
relationships
from. For example: Since we ran the projections
from a daily chart, we would want to go down to a 60-minute or even a 15-minute
chart to confirm a sale against this key resistance area.

If you look at a 15-minute chart back
around Nov. 15, you can see where a prior swing low was taken out at the 3118
level. This would have been considered a sell
“trigger”
against the 3153-3180 price cluster zone.

If you went down even further to a two-minute
chart, the violation of the 3135 swing low could have been taken as a
sell trigger.

Now let’s look at moving
averages
.
If you are short-term oriented, you want to get a trading
signal as soon as possible. Therefore, you would probably want to use a five-minute
chart for trade entry using these averages. In this example, the averages were
violated after the high was made within the 3153-3180 price cluster zone (3155
actual high)
. As soon as these averages were violated (eight- and 13-bar in
this example), we would consider a sale with the risk defined just above the top
of the price cluster zone, or just above the high made before the
reversal signal via the averages. If you are longer-term oriented, you may want
to use the 60-minute chart and moving averages for your trade signals.

For those of you that have a favorite
indicator of a change in trend (MACD, stochastics, buy or sell patterns, etc.),
I invite you to combine your trigger/indicators with these key price
relationships and check the results. I think you will be pleased with the
combination of methods. Personally, I will either buy or sell directly against a
cluster IF and ONLY IF it is in the direction of the main trend.
Otherwise, attempting to pick a bottom or pick the top can be very costly.
Alternately, I use the violation of a prior swing high or low as confirmation,
typically on a shorter-term chart (five- to 15-minute) similar to the example
described above.

What about stops
and money management?

Initial risk against a cluster trade
is always defined as just marginally above or below the actual price cluster
zone. Once you enter a trade against this zone, if it starts to move in your
favor, you should move to a breakeven stop ASAP and then trail the stop.

What about exiting
the trade?

There are two ways to exit a price
cluster trade. Either allow a trailing stop take you out (as long as the initial
stop does not), or you could exit if the price objectives via this same analysis are
met. For a trailing stop, I recommend placing these stops just ticks below a
prior swing low or high as the market moves in your favor.

What about trading
against single Fibonacci levels?

Although we prefer to see a
confluence
of levels before stepping up to the plate on a trade, there are
instances when a single retracement, price-extension or price-projection level
will produce a “turn” or change in trend in the market. In the case
when we only see one of these price relationships , we would definitely
wait for confirmation of a change in trend against the level as the odds
for a change in trend are lower than when we have a confluence of relationships
come together.

In the example below on a 30-minute
chart in the Nasdaq 100 futures, we had a single .786
price retracement
of the 2436 swing low to the 2683 swing high come
in at 2488. A low was made just a touch below this key retracement level at
2481. How would we have known not to take a trade against the .382, .50, or .618
retracement of this same prior swing and to take a trade against the .786 price
retracement zone instead? If you waited for confirmation
of a reversal or change in trend, you would not have entered a trade until the
fourth (or .786 retracement) essentially held and was then followed by a
reversal trigger. What is the reversal trigger? Check out the next chart
example.

If you went down to a
five-minute chart after this contract held right around the .786
price retracement
, a rally above the prior minor swing high at the
2514
level would have been considered a
“buy trigger”
against the .786 retracement. The risk at that
point was defined below the 2481 low. Personally, I rarely use a single
retracement to trade against, unless it is of a major daily range since price “clustering”
is so much more powerful.

There is one more way we qualify
Fibonacci levels to trade against. That is with TIMING. If we see an
important time relationship, or a confluence of time relationships at the same
time Fib levels are hitting on the price axis of the market, the odds for a
change in trend increase dramatically. This however, will be discussed in a
future lesson, perhaps the next one.

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