|
Only one of two things can happen when a price approaches support or
resistance: the price can break through it, or it can bounce off and
reverse direction. The same is of course true for trend lines.
1. Trading on a Pullback
If a chart is trending in a clear direction, and a trend line can be
drawn connecting a series of relative highs or relative lows, trading
opportunities exist when the price approaches the trend line. If the
price bounces off the trend line and resumes the trend in the original
direction, this can be an excellent opportunity to enter the market in
the direction of the dominant trend. This is often referred to as
buying on a pullback in an up trend or selling into strength in a
downtrend.
Buying on a bounce off such a support line can be done through a limit order just above the support.
2. Trading a Break of the Trend
The second possible trade is the break of the trend line, which can
be traded just as any other broken support or resistance line. If a
candle closes through a trend line to the downside, as in the example
below, the proper entry point would be to sell once the price moves
below the low of the breakthrough candle.
This ensures that the short term force is in the direction of the
break lower. The opposite would be true for a break above a resistance
line.
|