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Head and Shoulders: Measured Targets in Practice

Trade head and shoulders top and bottom patterns with neckline breaks, volume confirmation, and the measured-move target for precise exits.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#chart-patterns#technicals
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Head and Shoulders: Measured Targets in Practice

The head and shoulders is the most-named and most-mistraded chart pattern. Traders see it everywhere; few measure it correctly. Backtests across liquid US equities and FX majors show that confirmed (close break + volume) head and shoulders tops reach the measured move 60-65% of the time, yet the average retail trader exits at random because they never compute the target. The measured-move target is not a guess — it is a formula, and applying it separates profitable pattern traders from the rest.

Core Concept

The head and shoulders is a reversal pattern with three peaks. The structure (top):

  • Left shoulder: peak on normal volume.
  • Head: higher peak, often on slightly lower volume than the left shoulder.
  • Right shoulder: lower peak, on clearly lower volume.
  • Neckline: the trendline connecting the lows between the shoulders. May slope up, down, or be flat.

The pattern is valid only when all three peaks form and the neckline is identifiable. A "right shoulder" that exceeds the head is not a head and shoulders — it is a trend.

Default parameters: confirm on a daily or 4H chart (intraday versions are noisier); neckline break confirmed by a close, not a wick; volume on the break ≥ 1.5× the 20-day average.

The measured-move formula projects the head-to-neckline distance from the neckline break:

  • Top: Target = Neckline − (Head High − Neckline)
  • Bottom (inverse): Target = Neckline + (Neckline − Head Low)

Concrete example: a top with the head at $110 and the neckline at $100. Projected distance = $110 − $100 = $10. Target = $100 − $10 = $90. For an inverse bottom with head low at $80 and neckline at $90: projected = $10, target = $90 + $10 = $100.

Practical Application

Rule 1: Wait for the Neckline Close

The pattern completes on a close below the neckline (top) or above (bottom). Wick breaks fail 50-55%; closes succeed 60-70%. Volume on the neckline break should be 1.5-2× the 20-day average. Low-volume breaks stall and retest the neckline 60% of the time; high-volume breaks follow through 65-75%.

Rule 2: Measure From Head to Neckline

Element Top Bottom
Pattern Three peaks, head highest Three troughs, head lowest
Trigger Close below neckline Close above neckline
Volume ≥ 1.5-2× 20-day avg ≥ 1.5-2× 20-day avg
Target Neckline − (Head − Neckline) Neckline + (Neckline − Head)

This is a minimum target, not a maximum. Strong patterns extend 1.5-2× the measured move in trending contexts; in ranges, the measured move is usually the full extent.

Rule 3: Place Stops Beyond the Right Shoulder

Stop above the right shoulder (top) or below it (bottom). Inside the right shoulder = stopped on noise; beyond the head = oversized risk. Scale out: Target 1 (measured move) for 50% of the position, Target 2 (1.5× measured move) for 30%, and trail the remaining 20% under prior swing lows.

Worked Trade Example

Daily chart, head and shoulders top. Head at $110, neckline at $100, right shoulder peaks at $106. Price closes below the neckline at $99.20 on volume 1.8× the 20-day average.

  • Entry: $99.00 on the neckline close
  • Stop: $106.20 (just above the right shoulder), risk $7.20
  • Target 1: measured move = $100 − ($110 − $100) = $90, exit 50%
  • Target 2: 1.5× measured move = $85, exit 30%
  • Trail the remaining 20% under prior swing lows
  • R:R ≈ 1:1.4 to Target 1, ≈ 1:2.0 blended
  • Filters passed: confirmed close break, volume confirmation, right-shoulder stop

Checklist

  • Three peaks/troughs formed; right shoulder does not exceed head
  • Neckline identifiable with one clean line through both lows
  • Break confirmed by a close (not a wick)
  • Break volume ≥ 1.5× 20-day average
  • Target computed from head-to-neckline; stop beyond the right shoulder

Common Mistakes

  1. Anticipating the right shoulder before it forms. What looks like a shoulder may be a continuation flag. Fix: wait for all three peaks to form and the neckline to break before entering — no anticipation.

  2. Drawing the neckline too loosely. Both lows must connect with one clean line; a curved or forced neckline invalidates the pattern. Fix: if the two lows do not connect with a single straight line, the pattern is not tradeable.

  3. Ignoring volume on the head. A head and shoulders with rising volume on the head is a trend, not a reversal. Fix: require declining volume from left shoulder → head → right shoulder; rising volume invalidates the reversal thesis.

Advanced Tips

The retest entry — buying/selling the pullback to the neckline after the break — has a 10-15% higher hit rate than the breakout entry, but misses patterns that do not retest (roughly 40% run straight to target). For neckline confluence, a trendline break that coincides with the neckline break is a higher-probability signal — see Trendline Drawing Standardization. For volume confirmation logic, see Volume Profile vs Traditional Volume Bars, and for ATR-based stops on the right shoulder, see ATR Adaptive Stop Loss and Position Sizing. Pattern traders win on R:R, not win rate — the measured move keeps exits disciplined.

Summary

The head and shoulders is a formula, not a feeling. Wait for three peaks, a clean neckline, a confirmed close break on 1.5-2× volume, and compute the target from head-to-neckline. Stop beyond the right shoulder, scale out 50% at the measured move, 30% at 1.5×, and trail the rest. The edge is moderate but real — pattern traders win on R:R, not win rate.

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