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Fibonacci Fans and Arcs: Applying Time-Price Geometry
Fibonacci fans and arcs add a time dimension to retracement analysis by projecting diagonal support and resistance lines and curved zones that flag reversals where price meets time.
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Fibonacci Fans and Arcs: Applying Time-Price Geometry
Horizontal Fibonacci levels ignore time. Fans and arcs put time back into the geometry, and where price meets a fan line or arc, the reversal probability is materially higher than at a horizontal level alone.
Fans and arcs are the time-aware Fibonacci tools. Both project from a swing extreme along angles or curves derived from the Fibonacci ratios. They are underused because traders apply them as standalone signals rather than as confluence overlays.
Fibonacci fans: the construction
Drawn from a confirmed swing low (in an uptrend) to the subsequent high, the fan projects three diagonal lines at angles corresponding to 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8% of the price-time move. The lines act as moving support in an uptrend and resistance in a downtrend. A wrong anchor produces lines that mean nothing.
Reading fan lines
- Price above all three fan lines: strong uptrend; the 38.2 line is the first dynamic support.
- Price between the 38.2 and 50 lines: trend softening; the 50 line is next support.
- Price between the 50 and 61.8 lines: trend in question; the 61.8 line is the last defence.
- Price below the 61.8 line: trend broken; re-draw the fan from the new swing.
The fan lines converge over time — a horizontal level is the same price forever, but a fan line rises (in an uptrend) and meets price at a different price each session.
Fibonacci arcs
Arcs are drawn from the same swing low to high but project curved lines at 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8% radii. They expand over time, creating zones where price and time intersect. Read arcs as zones, not lines. The 61.8 arc is the most common reversal zone; the 38.2 arc is the most common acceleration zone.
The confluence rule
Fans and arcs work as overlays, not standalone signals:
- A fan line + a horizontal retracement at the same price → high-probability reversal.
- An arc zone + a horizontal level + a prior swing structure → very high probability.
- A fan line alone → do not trade. Fan lines without horizontal confluence produce roughly 45% win rates in backtests; with confluence, that rises to 62%.
The trade plan with confluence
- Entry: when price touches the confluence of a 61.8 fan line and a 61.8 horizontal retracement, on a reversal bar.
- Stop: 0.4 × ATR beyond the fan line. The fan's slope means the stop rises each session; recompute at entry.
- Target 1: the 38.2 fan line (prior dynamic support). Scale 50%.
- Target 2: the swing high. Scale 50%.
Typical risk-reward at target 1: 1:1.6; at target 2: 1:2.4.
Worked example
Stock swings from $80 low to $100 high over 20 sessions. The 61.8 horizontal retracement is $87.60. On session 28, the 61.8 fan line has risen to $87.60. Price pulls back to $87.60 and prints a hammer. Confluence confirmed: fan line + horizontal retracement + reversal bar.
Entry at $87.60. ATR = $2.50, stop at $87.60 − (0.4 × $2.50) = $86.60. Target 1: the 38.2 fan line ≈ $93. Target 2: $100. Risk = $1.00, reward to target 1 = $5.40 (1:5.4), to target 2 = $12.40 (1:12.4).
When arcs outperform fans
Arcs outperform in long, gradual trends where the time-price relationship is consistent. Fans outperform in volatile trends where sharp moves distort arc geometry. Practical rule: if the swing used to draw the tool lasted fewer than 15 sessions, use fans; if more than 30, use arcs.
Common error: repainting anchors
Both tools repaint if you re-anchor after a new extreme forms mid-trade. Once a trade is open off a fan or arc confluence, do not re-anchor until the trade closes. Re-anchoring moves the lines and the stop — how small losses become large ones.
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