strategy · Rule-based

Fibonacci Retracement Strategy: Buy the Pullback

A Fibonacci retracement strategy that buys pullbacks to key Fib levels inside an established trend, using confluence to time entries.

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Fibonacci Retracement Strategy: Buy the Pullback

Overview

Fibonacci retracements mark the natural discount levels inside a trend. After a strong impulse leg, price often pulls back to the 38.2%, 50%, or 61.8% level before resuming. This strategy draws Fibs on a clear impulse and buys the pullback to a key level that aligns with other confluence — a moving average, a support zone, or a prior swing.

Setup

  • Instruments: forex majors, stocks, index ETFs, crypto
  • Timeframe: 4H or daily
  • Indicators: Fibonacci retracement tool, 50 SMA, 200 SMA, ATR(14)
  • Market regime: trending, with a clear impulse leg to measure

Draw the Fib from the swing low to the swing high of the most recent impulse (for longs).

Entry rules

  1. Confirm the higher-timeframe trend is up — price above the 200 SMA
  2. Identify a clear impulse leg and draw Fibs from low to high
  3. Wait for price to retrace to the 38.2%, 50%, or 61.8% level
  4. Require confluence: the Fib level must align with the 50 SMA, a prior support zone, or a round number
  5. Enter on a bullish reversal candle that closes at the Fib level

Stop loss

  • Stop just below the 61.8% level, or below the swing low of the impulse
  • Alternative: 1.5 × ATR(14) below entry
  • Exit if a candle closes below the 61.8% level — the retracement has become a reversal

Use the stop loss calculator to set the distance.

Take profit

  • First target: the previous swing high (the 0% Fib), take half off
  • Second target: a Fib extension level such as 127.2% or 161.8%
  • Trail the remainder below the 50 SMA

Confirm the target with the risk-reward calculator.

Risk management

  • Risk 1% of account equity per trade
  • Position size = risk amount ÷ (entry − stop). Verify with the position size calculator
  • Take only one Fib entry per impulse — averaging into deeper levels adds risk
  • Skip trades where no confluence exists; a Fib level alone is not an edge

When it fails

Fibonacci fails when the impulse leg was unclear or the trend has already broken. If price closes below the 61.8% level, the retracement has become a reversal — respect the stop. Never redraw Fibs to fit a losing trade.

Strategy is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice.

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