Last Tuesday’s commentary left price just under a downtrend line (shown today in yellow) on the 45 minute chart. Since that level had also completed a potential A-B-C with “C” pausing at 62% of “A”, it was looking much like a top.
After pointing that out, my next sentence was “Of course a breakout tomorrow morning would change this pattern …” The magic of Fibonacci and trendlines is how often they work, not that they can predict the market. Part of successful trading is the ability to quickly adapt to new information. On the shortened trading day Wednesday price pushed through both the trendline and the Fib level. But look what happened next.
As soon as price exceeds a pivot point, you want to draw an external retracement measurement to show the 127% and 162% Fib levels. That’s where to start looking for the next potential reversal. And that’s where we closed on the three bars that eSignal shows occurring on the 4th. That doesn’t predict the downturn this morning — it just means it shouldn’t have come as a surprise.
As I have said many times, where there are two pullbacks in a move, the first one will usually be large (most often 62%) and the second one small (38%.) Today the second pullback turned right at the 38% Fibonacci level AND bounced off the support of the broken trendline. An obvious place for a turn.
On my three minute trading chart you can see the market made a nice A-B-C=100% Measured Move that hit the bottom of a parallel channel (in yellow). That gives today’s low two measurements from a 45 minute chart combined with two more from the trading chart. When multiple time frames agree on direction, you have a high probability trade.
Of course there are often more potential Fib and channel trades than I point out (or sometimes even see) that are available during the trading day. In Tuesday’s comments John explains how he used the $Tick reading combined with the magenta channel this morning to execute a nice short sale starting at “X” on the chart. Nice trade, John.
