Harmonic Trading: Fibonacci and Geometric Patterns
Harmonic trading is a methodology that uses precise Fibonacci ratios to identify geometric price patterns, offering defined entry zones, stop placement, and profit targets.
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Harmonic Trading: Fibonacci and Geometric Patterns
Markets move in geometry, and Fibonacci is the ruler that measures it.
Harmonic trading is a methodology built on the idea that price retracements and extensions follow specific Fibonacci ratios, producing recurring geometric structures. Pioneered by H.M. Gartley in 1935 and formalized by Scott Carney and Larry Pesavento in the late 1990s, it gives traders a rules-based way to identify reversal zones before they form.
The core idea
A harmonic pattern is a sequence of swings labeled X, A, B, C, D. Each leg must conform to defined Fibonacci ratios. When all legs align, the pattern completes at point D, which sits inside a Potential Reversal Zone (PRZ) — a tightly clustered area where price is likely to react.
The five labeled points
Every harmonic pattern is built from five pivots:
- X — the origin of the impulse leg.
- A — the first reaction extreme.
- B — the first retracement.
- C — the second swing leg.
- D — the completion point and reversal zone.
The trader's job is to measure each leg against Fibonacci ratios and only act when the structure qualifies.
Fibonacci ratios used
Harmonic trading extends beyond the basic 38.2% and 61.8% retracements. The full set includes:
- 0.382, 0.500, 0.618, 0.786 (retracements)
- 1.272, 1.414, 1.618, 2.618, 3.618 (extensions)
- 0.886 and 0.382 (specialized harmonic ratios)
Different patterns require different combinations of these ratios, which is why each pattern has its own article in this series.
The main patterns
| Pattern | Key ratio at D | Bias |
|---|---|---|
| Gartley | 0.786 of XA | Reversal |
| Bat | 0.886 of XA | Reversal |
| Butterfly | 1.618 of XA | Extended reversal |
| Crab | 1.618 of XA (deep) | Extended reversal |
| Cypher | 0.786 of XC | Reversal |
| Shark | 0.886 of XC | Reversal |
| 5-0 | 0.50 of BC | Reversal |
Why harmonic trading appeals
- Defined risk: the stop goes just beyond point D.
- Defined reward: targets are measured Fibonacci retracements of the pattern.
- Objective structure: ratios either align or they do not — no guesswork.
- Reversal focus: catches tops and bottoms with confluence.
Why it is hard
The strictness is both the strength and the trap. A pattern that is "almost" a Gartley is not a Gartley — it is noise. Most failed harmonic trades come from accepting structures that violate the ratio rules. Discipline to wait for a textbook completion is the price of admission.
Getting started
Begin with the Gartley and Bat patterns, the most reliable and most common. Trade them on daily charts first, where the signal-to-noise ratio is highest. Only move to intraday once pattern recognition is automatic and your win rate justifies it.
The mindset
Harmonic trading is not prediction — it is reaction. You wait for the geometry to complete inside the PRZ, then react with a defined-risk entry. This shift from forecasting to reacting is what separates profitable harmonic traders from frustrated ones.
Next: the Gartley pattern, the original and most reliable harmonic structure.
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