Precisely identify entry points for placing orders and find the best reversal zones, focusing on "area substitution points" and "multi-factor resonance" to avoid being swept by market random fluctuations or false breakouts.


Look for structure: supply and demand zones and order blocks.
Pay attention to the initial candlestick (order block OB) that causes the price to quickly break away or the gaps (FVG) left behind, as these are dense transaction zones of institutional large orders, which are highly likely to trigger reversals when the price retraces later.
Positioning: Fibonacci retracement and OTE zones.
In trending markets, use Fibonacci tools. The 0.618 (Golden Ratio) is a strong reversal point, while the "Optimal Trade Entry (OTE)" zone between 0.62 and 0.79 is often used by professional traders to place pending orders.
Waiting for resonance: multi-timeframe/indicator confluence.
When support and resistance levels, Fibonacci levels, previous highs and lows, or trendlines coincide multiple times, and smaller timeframes show reversal candlestick patterns like hammer or engulfing, it becomes a high-probability order zone.
Order placement techniques: staggered and buffered.
Reversal zones are usually price ranges where you can place staggered orders; at the same time, do not set stop-losses right at the edge—leave buffer space (e.g., outside the structure) to guard against false breakouts that penetrate deeply.
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