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Pivot Reversal and Breakout Confirmation Tactics

Pivot levels support two tactics — reversal bounces and breakout continuations; each requires distinct confirmation rules to separate real moves from fakeouts.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#pivot-points#technicals
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Pivot Reversal and Breakout Confirmation Tactics

Every pivot level invites two opposite tactics: trade the reversal off it, or trade the breakout through it. Each needs its own confirmation — confusing the two is the most common pivot mistake.

The reversal tactic

A reversal trade fades the first test of a pivot level, expecting a bounce back toward the prior pivot.

Setup:

  1. Price approaches R1 (short reversal) or S1 (long reversal) for the first time in the session.
  2. Require a reversal candle on the 5- or 15-min chart: hammer, shooting star, or engulfing closing back through the level.
  3. Confirm volume on the reversal candle is at least 1.2× the 20-period average.

Entry: on the candle close. Stop: 2 ticks beyond the pivot level. Target: the PP (central pivot) — a minimum 1.5:1 R:R.

Reversal validity filters:

  • First test of the level only. Second and third tests weaken the bounce.
  • Reject if price gapped through the level — gaps signal drive, not reversal.
  • Reject if the level coincides with the higher-timeframe trend direction (don't fade R1 in a strong uptrend).

The breakout tactic

A breakout trade enters after price commits beyond a pivot level, expecting continuation to the next pivot.

Setup:

  1. Price closes a 15-min candle beyond R1 (long breakout) or S1 (short breakout).
  2. Confirm volume on the breakout candle is at least 1.5× the 20-period average.
  3. Require the next candle to hold beyond the level (no immediate reversion) — the retest.

Entry: on the retest of the broken level from the far side (R1 now support for longs). Stop: 2 ticks back below the level. Target: R2 (longs) or S2 (shorts).

Distinguishing real from fake

The discriminator is follow-through:

Signal Real move Fakeout
Breakout candle volume ≥1.5× average <1.0× average
Next candle Holds beyond level Reverses back through
Retest Bounces off level (now S/R) Breaks back through
Higher-timeframe trend Aligned Against

If any two "fakeout" conditions are present, do not take the breakout — fade it instead.

The failure-of-the-break trade

When a breakout fails (price closes back inside the level within 2 candles):

  1. Enter in the failure direction (short if a long breakout failed).
  2. Stop: 2 ticks beyond the breakout extreme.
  3. Target: the PP.

Failed pivots reverse hard because trapped breakout traders all exit together.

Workflow

Before each session, mark PP, R1, S1, R2, S2. At each level decide in advance: reversal or breakout? Apply the matching confirmation. Never enter a pivot trade without the candle close, the volume threshold, and the follow-through check — the level alone is not a signal.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

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