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Why can't traders ignore Fibonacci retracements?
When you observe an uptrend chart, you’ve probably seen those magic lines that seem to predict exactly where the price will “breathe” before continuing to rise. Yes, those are Fibonacci retracements – and they don’t work by chance.
The mathematics behind the market
The Fibonacci sequence is a simple concept: each number is the sum of the two previous ones (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13…). When you apply this logic to price movements, you’ll find that the market tends to respect certain psychological levels. The main indices are 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6%, and 100%.
But here’s the crucial detail: calculating a Fibonacci retracement is simple – you measure the vertical distance between a significant high and a significant low, divide by these proportions, and you’re done. The real challenge is knowing which level the price will respect in each situation.
The levels every trader watches
The Golden Ratio, also known as 61.8%, is considered the most important. It’s not just a number – it’s a proportion that appears throughout nature and, apparently, also in market behavior. This ratio often acts as a strong support or resistance area.
The 50% level, although not technically a Fibonacci index, is psychologically crucial. When the price is retracing, traders obsessively monitor what happens at this point. Does the price pass through easily? The trend should continue strongly. Encounter resistance? Maybe the retracement will go further.
Using retracements in your daily trading
During an uptrend, Fibonacci retracements act as zones where you can accumulate long positions. The price drops to one of these levels, traders buy, and the upward movement resumes. It’s simple but requires discipline.
In a downtrend, these same levels become resistances. When the price attempts a “breather” upward, it usually encounters sellers waiting at these historical levels.
Temporal flexibility
The beauty of Fibonacci retracements is that they work on any timeframe – 1-hour, 4-hour, daily, weekly, monthly charts. The principles remain the same, but reliability varies with the period. Retracements on larger timeframes tend to be more reliable because they involve more market participants.
Fibonacci retracement is not a crystal ball, but it is one of the most respected tools in technical analysis precisely because it works with startling regularity. Worth adding to your arsenal.