So some here would say this is just a coincidental move, as they exclude relevance of high/low/50% range of past price levels.
Last week SPX made new all time highs.. 4141 on 4/14 around 4:14am Hawaii-Standard Time. DEEDLE-DEEDLE QUEEP
Reaction straight off the 50% of the range. Experience and knowledge make up the edge, the rest is risk management.
While there are some who believe that - I don't believe I've seen anyone in particular in this thread claim that the market is random.
I'm being sarcastic. I am a proponent of using past reaction levels as a guide of when to open up a shorter time frame chart and seeing how price reacts to these levels. It's all about skills. There are quite a few on this board that discount TA completely, saying that past price action has no meaning when making trading decisions.
That would be true assuming an equal (random) distribution of the size of winners and losers. Successful trading systems with a lower win rate typically have average winners which are many multiples of the average loser, i.e., risk 1 to gain 10. In the end it's as simple as dollars gained minus dollars lost. Systems which NEED a very high win rate are not very robust as you'll quickly end up losing money as soon as your win rate goes down. The best is a higher win rate and high average win, but the two are usually inversely correlated. Even the famous Medallion fund have been said to have a win rate not much above 50 %.
Sure. Let's be clear though. There's a big difference between annotating a chart after the fact and trading the chart in real time. In your posted chart - support held. On the swing low prior to that - support broke.
Did you not see the blue 50% range I posted before the fact? What happened after? Almost 0 pain bounce off that level. Nothing is guaranteed when it comes to trading. I'm simply saying that taking levels from the bigger charts makes total sense for retail traders as we are pretty clueless in comparison to pro traders.
Yes, you posted it before the fact, but you didn't explicitly say it was a sell. What I'm saying is that it's very easy to annotate charts after the fact compared to actually successfully trading charts day after day. That's when the rubber meets the road. Identifying a level may be important. Knowing how to trade that level (or choose not to trade it) is more important.