Fibonacci
Trading Techniques
Introduction
to Fibonacci trading techniques.
First, a few
words about Fibonacci himself
Leonardo Pisano
(nickname Fibonacci) was a mathematician, born in 1170, in Pisa
(now Italy). His father was Guilielmo, of the Bonacci family. His
father was a diplomat, as a result Fibonacci was educated in North
Africa, where he learned "accounting" and "mathematics".
Fibonacci also
contributed to the science of numbers, and introduced the "Fibonacci
sequence"
The Fibonacci
sequence is the sequence 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144,
introduced in his work "Liber abaci" in a problem involving
the growth of a population of rabbits.
Aside from this
sequence of number where every next number is the sum of the proceeding
two, 0, 1 (0+1), 2 (1+1), 3 (2+1), 5 (3+2), 8 (5+3), 13 (8+5), etc.
There are the
"Fibonacci ratios".. By comparing the relationship between
each number, and each alternate number, and even each number to
the one four places to the right, we arrive at some fairly consistent
ratios.. The important ones are .236, 50, .382, .618, .764, 1.382,
1.618, 2.618, 4.236, and for good measure we include 1.00 ..
It turns out
that the ratios are mathematical principles prevalent in nature
around us, and is also in man-made objects. There are many interesting,
entertaining, and poetic observations about Fibonacci numbers and
ratios in the universe (see the reference section below). Fibonacci
numbers appear in ancient buildings, in plants, planets, molecules,
the dimensions of human bodies, and of course snails
But of
what use is all that to the lowly trader?
What really
interests you, the application of Fibonacci techniques in the trading
environment..
Traders usually
study charts! Fibonacci ratios may be applied to the Price scale,
and also to the time scale of charts. I study the price scale. My
focus here will be on the price scale for now, perhaps in the future
Ill add some time-scale studies.
Prices never
move in a straight line. Look at any chart, you will see many wiggles,
as price advances and retraces.. Stocks, Futures, Forex, all instruments
which are liquid, will often retrace in Fibonacci proportions, and
advance in Fibonacci proportions. Not always, and not precisely
to the penny. But very often, and reasonably close! This happens
often enough that profitable trades can result. I will show you
some examples below.
I used Fibonacci
ratios with a few simple indicators to help determine probable price
turning points, optimum entry, exit and stop-loss levels. My complete
techniques are available in on-line video seminars, in-person seminars,
and via my real-time on-line chat facility. For more details, see
the this web page
The application
of Fibonacci to trading can be very complex, and take much time
and experience to perfect. Many traders enjoy making the process
as difficult and as complex as they can tolerate.. I do the opposite,
I try to simplify, try to bring clarity.
Fibonacci example
- Microsoft Weekly chart.
This lesson demonstrates a very basic way to use Fibonacci levels.
You just read about Fibonacci ratios. We will use just one of those
ratios for now, the .382 Fibonacci ratio. In this chart MSFT made
a high of (approximately) $59.97 in December of 1999. After that,
it moved down to make a low of $30.19 in May of 2000.

The down move
was $29.78 (59.97-30.19), quite a substantial amount.
Projecting from
that low in May, and using a Fibonacci ratio, we can calculate 29.78*.382=$11.37
. So 38.2% of 29.78 is 11.37 . If MSFT were to rally 38.2% of the
down-move it would reach $41.57 (11.37+30.20). Im using rounded
numbers in my calculations, the chart above calculates it to be
$41.564, we dont need that degree of accuracy!
Several weeks
later, MSFT rallied and resisted right near that .382 Fibonacci
level !!
So we were able
to predict a future probable turning point (after the low of May
2000), using the Fibonacci ratio of .382!! If only it were always
so easy.
The steps involved
are:
Calculate the total value of a significant price-move (high to low,
or vice-versa).
Calculate a Fibonacci retracement (in this case .382) of the prior
move.
Look for price to confirm, by resisting (or support in an up-move)
near that predicted retracement area.
Fibonacci example
- Microsoft Daily chart.
This chart shows how a different Fibonacci level (61.8%) predicted
resistance and a market turn.
Notice how the
market behaved at the .382 level (30.80 area). Initially the market
spiked through, then fell back to that level (late October). We
cannot expect a chart to retrace at every Fib level. We can expect
some support/resistance as buyers/sellers enter the market at these
levels, but we cant always predict whether the market will
actually turn at any particular level. Fibonacci techniques are
used to alert you to a possible trade, if that price level does
cause support or resistance. These techniques are not used as a
trigger for entry. Other indicators are used in conjunction with
Fibonacci studies to provide higher-probability entries..

As mentioned
before, there are several Fib levels, .236, 50, .382, .618, .764,
1.382, 1.618, 2.618, 4.236, and 1.00 .. So there are several places
to look for a market turn. They can be calculated in advance, but
trading blindly at a fib level can be dangerous, because you never
know for certain (in advance) whether the market will turn at any
particular Fib level. I use other indicators to help overcome that
problem, click here to learn how to determine which Fib ratio is
likely to be strong enough to turn the market.
Important notes
from this lesson:
There are several Fib levels.
It takes some skill to determine which Fib level is likely to cause
the market to turn.
There are some techniques to help you determine where a market is
more likely to turn.
Do not blindly anticipate a market turn at a Fib level.
More Fibonacci
examples.
QQQ Weekly chart
with a deep retracement to .618 and a weak attempt to rally after
that. However, consider the daily chart and intraday traders. they
would have enjoyed the rally from $75 to $100, after going long
from a support level that could have been predicted in March!

QQQ daily chart.
Multiple Fib levels timing the market perfectly in 3 consecutive
waves up!
Intraday chart,
QQQ 30-minute. Notice the two market Fib retracements (there are
others in this chart too).. The rally from 29.26 stopped at 31.10,
then it supported **twice** at 30.39, for two good scalps. The next
highlighted Fib support is at a retracement of .618 from the move
up 30.47 to 32.49 .. Both of these support levels were predictable
before the market supported there.. Hint:--- See how the rally continued
after the shallow retracement to 30.39 ... See how the rally after
the deeper retracement to .618 near 31.25 was a weaker rally.. This
is common, a deeper retracement often foretells a weaker rally...
See the next lesson in the table of contents for more on these advanced
Fibonacci trading principles.

Another intraday
chart, S&P 5-minute.. The first Fib retracement is on a bearish
move, an opportunity to short. The second is bullish, with a long
entry near 999.25 .. Note that popular charting software will calculate
Fibonacci to rediculous precision, we dont need anything closer
than one tick! Actually, you should allow some room dont expect
precision every time. Allow the trade some room to develop, or you
will be stopped out too often.

More Advanced
- Microsoft Daily chart.
By now youre
probably quite interested, perhaps applying all those Fibonacci
ratios to many charts.. You should experiment with your own charts.
As long as the instrument traded has a lot of liquidity (not a penny
stock for example), you should start to see Fib support and resistance
at work. You will start to notice that Fibonacci levels "work"
sometimes and not others. Sometimes the trades are not profitable,
or are less profitable than others. You need to develop the skills
required to select better trades.
In this mini-lesson I want to show you how to evaluate price action
based on which Fib levels it responds to, and how the market behaves
immediately preceding the Fib support/resistance.
The chart below
actually has many Fibonacci levels "performing well",
providing support or resistance to the market. I want you to focus
on the two that I have identified, for the purposes of this lesson.

The first up-move
that I have identified topped out at $26.90, and then retraced 61.8%
before supporting at that Fib level. There was a pause at the .382
level, but it was not sufficient to hold the market. Now look at
the rally from the support level near .618, it rallied but did not
exceed the prior high of 26.90
As a general rule, a retracement
to .618 or below indicates that the preceding up-move is losing
steam. A shallow retracement which supports at .382 is more likely
to rally beyond the prior high than one which has a deep retracement
beyond .50 all the way to .618 ..
The impressive
thrust from 22.55 up to 26.90 was negated by a quick move back to
.618 at about 24.20, so a trader should not be too optimistic about
a continuation of the initial up-thrust.
Similarly, the
move up in June, from 23.50 to almost 26.50 would also not inspire
much optimism for a huge rally above the high of 26.50
In
general a shallow support at .382 would indicate a probable rally
beyond the prior high. However, if the up-move preceding the retracement
was sluggish rather than thrusting, you also should temper your
enthusiasm.
If the second
rally which only retraced to .382 had the thrust of the first rally,
it would be a more attractive trade!
These are not
firm rules, instead they are used as a guide, to help you filter
for better trades. Every Fib level is not equal, some are more attractive
than others.
Important notes
from this lesson:
Not all Fib levels are alike.
No technical study is perfect, you must develop the skills to filter
out bad trades, and improve the odds of finding better trades.
Price action just before a Fib retracement can tell you something
about the future.
Which Fib level causes the end of a retracement also can give a
hint to future price action.
No technical study is perfect, you must develop the skills to filter
out bad trades, and improve the odds of finding better trades.
Good Trading
Best Regards
Neal Hughes
http://www.fibmarkets.com/
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