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Momentum Breakout: New Highs With Volume Confirmation
A momentum breakout strategy that buys instrument new highs only when volume confirms, with false-breakout filters and trailing exit rules.
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Momentum Breakout: New Highs With Volume Confirmation
Momentum breakouts buy strength, betting that price exiting a range with conviction continues rather than reverses. The strategy fails when "conviction" is just low-liquidity drift — a thin tape pushing through a level with no real buying behind it. Volume is the filter that separates the two, and it is the difference between a strategy that compounds and one that bleeds.
Core Concept: Strength Begetting Strength
A momentum breakout rests on a simple premise: when buyers are willing to pay the highest price in weeks (a new high) on above-average volume, demand is genuinely expanding and the move tends to continue. The strategy is the opposite of mean reversion — it buys extremes, expecting them to extend. The four setup conditions define a tradeable breakout: a range that has consolidated for at least 3 weeks (the tighter and longer the base, the more energy stored); a breakout trigger defined as a daily close above the 20-day high (intraday breaks whipsaw and are not confirmed); volume confirmation where breakout-day volume is at least 1.5x the 50-day average (below 1.5x signals no conviction, skip); and trend context where the 50-day SMA slopes upward (buying a breakout in a downtrend is catching a falling knife).
Entry is at the open of the day after the confirmed breakout close. Do not chase intraday — if you missed the close, wait for either a small pullback to the breakout level or the next confirmed close. The strategy's edge depends on selectivity, not on catching every move. Worked example: stock ABC has ranged between $48 and $52 for 5 weeks. On Monday it closes at $53.10 on volume 2.1x the 50-day average, with the 50-day SMA sloping up. All four conditions are met — entry is at Tuesday's open, say $53.25.
The strategy's statistical profile matters: breakouts run a lower win rate (35–45%) than mean reversion, so the winners must be larger to compensate. That is why the minimum R/R is 2R and the trailing exit is designed to let winners run. Most of the profitability comes from the occasional 5–8R runner, not from a high hit rate.
Practical Application: Entry, Stop, and Targets
Once the breakout close confirms, the entry and management are mechanical. Enter at the open of the next session. Place the stop immediately.
Stop placement: below the breakout level minus 1x ATR(14), or below the breakout candle low — whichever is tighter. A clean break that reclaims the old high should not revisit the breakout candle low; if it does, the break is false and you exit.
Targets and R/R:
| Element | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Stop | Breakout level − 1x ATR(14), or breakout candle low | $52.00 − $0.90 = $51.10 |
| Risk per share | Entry − stop | $53.25 − $51.10 = $2.15 |
| Target 1 | Range height projected up (measured move) | Range $4 → T1 $57.00, exit 50% |
| Target 2 | Trail remainder with 3-day low stop | Or exit on close below 20-day SMA |
| Minimum R/R | 2R to Target 1 | Risk $2.15, reward ≥ $4.30 |
| Position size | 0.5–1% account risk | $10k account, 1% = $100 risk |
Pre-trade checklist:
- Base is at least 3 weeks old, ideally tight consolidation.
- Breakout is a daily close above the 20-day high (not intraday).
- Volume is ≥ 1.5x the 50-day average (target 2.5x for the high-quality subset).
- 50-day SMA slopes upward.
- Broad index (SPY) is above its 50-day SMA.
- Sector ETF is also breaking out or trending up.
- R/R to Target 1 is at least 2R.
False-breakout filters and management:
- Wick rejection: if the breakout candle closes back inside the range, it is a failed break — do not enter, and consider the short side.
- Sector confirmation: lone-stock breakouts in weak sectors fail more often; require the sector ETF to confirm.
- Market regime: avoid breakouts when SPY is below its 50-day SMA — correlated weakness sinks individual breakouts.
- Trail the runner with a 3-day low stop once Target 1 is hit; exit fully on a daily close back below the 20-day SMA.
Common Mistakes
- Chasing the intraday break. Buying the moment price ticks a new high gets you in on the lowest-quality breaks — the ones that fail by the close. Correction: wait for the daily close above the 20-day high, then enter at the next open.
- Ignoring volume. A breakout on average or below-average volume is drift, not conviction. Correction: require 1.5x the 50-day average at minimum; concentrate capital in the 2.5x subset once you have data.
- Cutting winners, holding losers. Selling the runner at 1R because it "feels big enough," while holding the failing break hoping it comes back. Correction: the strategy's edge is in the 5–8R runner — trail it with the 3-day low stop and let it run. Exit losers at the stop, no exceptions.
Advanced Tips
Track win rate by base length (3–6 weeks vs 6+ weeks) and by volume multiple (1.5x vs 2.5x) in your journal. Most practitioners find the 2.5x volume and 6+ week base subset has a meaningfully higher win rate — concentrate capital there once you have 30+ trades of data. Combine with a relative-strength filter: only buy breakouts in instruments ranked in the top 20% of 6-month relative strength, since breakouts in relative laggards fail more often. For setup logging and subset analysis, see /journal; for the full strategy catalog including the pullback entry variant, see /strategies; and use the volume-breakout screener at /tools to surface only qualifying setups each night.
Summary
Momentum breakouts buy strength confirmed by volume, not by hope. Wait for the daily close above a 3-week base on 1.5x volume, enter at the next open, risk 0.5–1%, and trail winners with a 3-day low stop. The 35–45% win rate is offset by 5–8R runners — protect them and cut the losers at the stop.
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