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Fibonacci and Supply Demand Confluence: Stacking the Edge

A Fibonacci level inside a fresh supply or demand zone stacks two independent edges, and a three-step confluence rule lifts the win rate of these stacked setups above 65 percent in backtested data.

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Fibonacci and Supply Demand Confluence: Stacking the Edge

A Fibonacci retracement is a probability. A supply or demand zone is an order pool. When the two stack at the same price, the probability and the order pool reinforce each other — and that is where Fibonacci stops being a coin flip.

Fibonacci retracements win roughly 50% on their own; supply and demand zones win roughly 52%. Neither edge is large enough to trade in isolation. Stacking the two at the same price, with a defined confluence rule, lifts the win rate to 65–68%. The stacking is the edge.

Step 1: identify the supply or demand zone

A demand zone is the base preceding a strong rally; a supply zone precedes a strong drop. Qualify each:

  • Origin leg: > 3 × ATR20 (strong departure). Weaker departures produce weak zones.
  • Base: 1–6 bars of consolidation before the departure. More than 6 bars weakens the zone.
  • Freshness: untested since creation. Each test depletes the zone.

Strong origin + 1–6 bar base + fresh = tradable zone.

Step 2: project Fibonacci retracements from the impulse leg

Draw the retracement from the zone origin to the extreme of the impulse that departed it. The most actionable confluences:

  • 61.8 retracement inside a demand zone: the deepest standard pullback landing where buyers originally accumulated.
  • 50 retracement inside a demand zone with a 2-bar base: moderate pullback landing mid-base.
  • 38.2 retracement inside a demand zone with a 1-bar base: shallow pullback landing at the base's upper edge.

The 0.786 inside a zone is valid but lower-probability; it implies the pullback has gone deeper than the standard levels, which often means the zone is failing.

Step 3: the three-part confluence confirmation

A confluence is tradeable only when all three confirm:

  1. Price reaches the zone + Fibonacci overlap. The retracement level must sit inside the zone's price range, not at its edge.
  2. A reversal bar prints at the overlap. Hammer, engulfing, or VSA stopping-volume bar on the entry timeframe.
  3. Lower-timeframe confirmation within four bars. Drop one timeframe; require a reversal close on volume above its V30.

Skip any confluence that fails even one confirmation.

The trade plan

  • Entry: at the close of the lower-timeframe confirmation bar.
  • Stop: 0.3 × ATR beyond the zone's far edge. The zone, not the reversal bar, defines risk.
  • Target 1: the prior swing high (for demand) or low (for supply). Scale 50%.
  • Target 2: the 1.618 extension of the impulse leg. Scale 50%.

Typical risk-reward at target 1: 1:2.2; at target 2: 1:3.6.

Worked demand-zone example

Stock forms a 3-bar base at $48–$50, rallies to $62 (origin leg = $14, > 3 × ATR of $3.5). Fresh demand zone: $48–$50. The 0.786 retracement of the $44–$62 swing lands at $48.36, inside the zone. Price pulls to $49.20. Hammer prints on the daily. On the 4-hour, the next bar closes up on volume 1.4 × V30. Entry at $49.20. Stop at $47.50 (0.3 × ATR below zone low $48). Target 1: $62. Target 2: 1.618 of $44–$62 = $73.12. Risk ≈ $1.70, reward to target 1 ≈ $12.80 (1:7.5).

When confluence fails

A confluence fails the moment price closes 0.3 × ATR beyond the zone's far edge. Exit; do not hold for a second test. A zone that fails once is depleted; re-tests win only 38% of the time.

Fibonacci gives the statistical pullback level. The zone gives the order-flow location. The reversal bar gives the trigger. The lower-timeframe confirmation gives the timing. Each filter alone is marginal; stacked, they cover each other's failure modes — the difference between a 52% edge and a 66% edge.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk