How to Use Fibonacci Retracement with Trend Lines
Another good tool to combine with the Fibonacci retracement tool is trend line analysis.
After all, Fibonacci retracement levels work best when the market is trending, so this makes a lot of sense!
So why not look for levels where Fib levels line up right smack with the trend?
Here’s a 1-hour chart of AUD/JPY. As you can see, price has been respecting a short term rising trend line over the past couple of days.
You think to yourself, “Hmm, that’s a sweet uptrend right there. I wanna buy AUD/JPY, even if it’s just for a short term trade. I think I’ll buy once the pair hits the trend line again.”
Here we plotted the Fibonacci retracement levels by using the Swing low at 82.61 and the Swing High at 83.84.
Notice how the 50.0% and 61.8% Fib levels are intersected by the rising trend line.
Could these levels serve as potential support levels? There’s only one way to find out!
Guess what? The 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level held, as price bounced there before heading back up. If you had set some orders at that level, you would have had a perfect entry!
A couple of hours after touching the trend line, price zoomed up like Astro Boy bursting through the Swing High.
Aren’t you glad you’ve got this in your trading toolbox now?
As you can see, it does pay to make use of the Fibonacci retracement tool, even if you’re planning to enter on a retest of the trend line.
The combination of both a diagonal and a horizontal support or resistance level could mean that other traders are eying those levels as well.
Take note though, as with other drawing tools, drawing trend lines can also get pretty subjective.
You don’t know exactly how other traders are drawing them, but you can count on one thing – that there’s a trend!
If you see that a trend is developing, you should be looking for ways to go long to give you a better chance of a profitable trade. You can use the Fibonacci retracement tool to help you find potential entry points.
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