The first
thing you should know about the Fibonacci tool is that it works best when the
market is trending.
The idea
is to go long (or buy) on a retracement at a Fibonacci support level when the
market is trending up, and to go short (or sell) on a retracement at a
Fibonacci resistance level when the market is trending down.
In order to find these retracement levels, you have to find the
recent significant Swing Highs and Swings Lows. Then, for downtrends, click on
the Swing High and drag the cursor to the most recent Swing Low.
For uptrends, do the opposite. Click on the Swing Low and drag the cursor to the most recent Swing High.
For uptrends, do the opposite. Click on the Swing Low and drag the cursor to the most recent Swing High.
Got that?
Now, let's take a look at some examples on how to apply Fibonacci retracements
levels in the markets.
Uptrend
This is a
daily chart of AUD/USD.
Here we
plotted the Fibonacci retracement Levels by clicking on the Swing Low at .6955
on April 20 and dragging the cursor to the Swing High at .8264 on June 3. Tada!
The software magically shows you the retracement levels.
As you
can see from the chart, the retracement levels were .7955 (23.6%), .7764
(38.2%), .7609 (50.0%), .7454 (61.8%), and .7263 (76.4%).
Now, the
expectation is that if AUD/USD retraces from the recent high, it will find
support at one of those Fibonacci levels because traders will be placing buy
orders at these levels as price pulls back.
Now,
let's look at what happened after the Swing High occurred.
Price
pulled back right through the 23.6% level and continued to shoot down over the
next couple of weeks. It even tested the 38.2% level but was unable to close
below it.
Later on,
around July 14, the market resumed its upward move and eventually broke through
the swing high. Clearly, buying at the 38.2% Fibonacci level would have been a
profitable long term trade!
Downtrend
Now,
let's see how we would use the Fibonacci retracement tool during a downtrend.
Below is a 4-hour chart of EUR/USD.
As you
can see, we found our Swing High at 1.4195 on January 26 and our Swing Low at
1.3854 a few days later on February 2. The retracement levels are 1.3933
(23.6%), 1.3983 (38.2%), 1.4023 (50.0%), 1.4064 (61.8%) and 1.4114 (76.4%).
The
expectation for a downtrend is that if price retraces from this low, it will
encounter resistance at one of the Fibonacci levels because traders will be
ready with sell orders there.
Let's
take a look at what happened next.
Yowza,
isn't that a thing of beauty?!
The market
did try to rally, stalled below the 38.2% level for a bit before testing the
50.0% level. If you had some orders either at the 38.2% or 50.0% levels, you
would've made some mad pips on that trade.
In these two examples, we see that price found some temporary support or resistance at Fibonacci retracement levels. Because of all the people who use the Fibonacci tool, those levels become self-fulfilling support and resistance levels.
One thing you should take note of is that price won't always bounce
from these levels. They should be looked at as areas
of interest, or as Cyclopip likes to
call them, "KILL ZONES!"
We'll teach you more about that later on.
For now,
there's something you should always remember about using the Fibonacci tool and
it's that they are not always simple to use! If they were that simple, traders
would always place their orders at Fib levels and the markets would trend
forever.
In the
next lesson, we'll show you what can happen when Fibonacci levels fail.