Double Bottom Strategy: Catching Reversals
A double bottom strategy that enters on the second bottom of a reversal pattern, capturing the turn from downtrend to uptrend.
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Double Bottom Strategy: Catching Reversals
Overview
A double bottom is a classic reversal pattern shaped like a "W." Price falls to a low, bounces, then returns to test the same low before reversing higher. It signals that sellers have failed twice to push price lower — exhaustion is setting in. This strategy enters once the pattern confirms, capturing the turn from downtrend to uptrend.
Setup
- Instruments: stocks, forex majors, index ETFs, crypto
- Timeframe: 4H or daily (more reliable on higher timeframes)
- Indicators: horizontal support line, the "neckline," ATR(14), volume
- Market regime: at the end of a downtrend, near a significant support zone
A valid double bottom needs two lows at roughly the same price, separated by a bounce that forms the neckline (the high between the two lows).
Entry rules
- Identify two lows at the same price level with a bounce between them
- Draw the neckline across the bounce high
- Wait for price to close above the neckline with rising volume
- Enter on the next bar's open, or on the retest of the neckline from above
Stop loss
- Stop below the second bottom, or 1 × ATR(14) below the lows if they are equal
- Exit if price closes below the second bottom — the pattern has failed
- Never widen the stop hoping the pattern "still works"
Use the stop loss calculator to set the level.
Take profit
- Measure the pattern: target = neckline + (neckline − low) projected upward
- Take partial profits at the measured move target
- Trail the remainder below a swing structure or the 20 EMA
Confirm the target with the risk-reward calculator.
Risk management
- Risk 1% of account equity per double bottom
- Position size = risk amount ÷ (entry − stop). Verify with the position size calculator
- Take only one reversal trade per instrument — averaging into a third bottom is gambling
- Reduce size when the broader market trend is still down; reversal patterns fail more often against the higher-timeframe trend
When it fails
Double bottoms fail when the second low breaks lower — the sellers were not exhausted after all. The stop below the second bottom is your protection. Patterns also fail when volume does not expand on the neckline break; without buyers stepping in, the reversal has no fuel.
Strategy is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice.