strategy · Rule-based

Mean Reversion Strategy: Fade the Extremes

A mean reversion strategy that fades overextended moves, betting that price snaps back toward its statistical average.

T By tradernewbie · Test before trading live
#strategy#mean-reversion#forex#stocks
Este artigo está em inglês. Ver no seu idioma? Google Translate →

As ferramentas interativas podem não funcionar na vista traduzida.

Mean Reversion Strategy: Fade the Extremes

Overview

Markets oscillate. After an aggressive move, price often snaps back toward its mean — the 20 SMA or the midpoint of Bollinger Bands. Mean reversion traders fade these extremes, accepting a lower reward per trade in exchange for higher opportunity frequency in ranging markets. The edge comes from statistics, not prediction.

Setup

  • Instruments: forex majors, large-cap stocks, index ETFs
  • Timeframe: 1H or 4H (daily for slower fades)
  • Indicators: Bollinger Bands (20, 2), RSI(14), 20 SMA
  • Market regime: ranging — never fade inside a strong trend

A tradable extreme exists only when price pierces a band while RSI prints above 70 (overbought) or below 30 (oversold), and the 20 SMA is roughly flat.

Entry rules

  • Long: price closes below the lower Bollinger Band AND RSI < 30
  • Short: price closes above the upper Bollinger Band AND RSI > 70
  • Enter on the next bar's open after a reversal candle (pin bar, engulfing) confirms rejection of the extreme
  • Skip the trade if a major news release is imminent

Stop loss

  • Place the stop just beyond the extreme of the rejection candle
  • Maximum stop: 2 × ATR(14) — if the move requires a wider stop, the extreme is too strong to fade
  • Exit immediately if price closes outside the band for a third consecutive bar; the move is trending, not extended

Use the stop loss calculator to convert ATR into a price level.

Take profit

  • Primary target: the 20 SMA (the mean)
  • For strong reversals, hold a partial position to the opposite Bollinger Band
  • Target a minimum 1.5R — mean reversion typically offers smaller R but higher frequency

Confirm the math with the risk-reward calculator before entering.

Risk management

  • Risk 1% of account equity per fade
  • Position size = risk amount ÷ (entry − stop). Verify with the position size calculator
  • Maximum three fading trades open at once — they are correlated inside a ranging regime
  • If the 20 SMA starts sloping steeply, switch off the strategy; mean reversion fails in trends

When it fails

Mean reversion fails spectacularly in trending markets. A flat 20 SMA is your green light; a steeply sloping one is a warning to stop fading. Respect the stop — a single trend that runs through your fade can erase a week of small wins.

Strategy is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice.

Try the matching calculator →