strategy · Rule-based
Pullback to Moving Average Strategy (Beginner Edition)
A trend-following pullback strategy that buys strength at a discount. Enter when price pulls back to the 20 EMA in an established uptrend.
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Pullback to Moving Average Strategy (Beginner Edition)
Overview
This strategy buys pullbacks in established trends. Instead of chasing breakouts, you wait for price to retrace to a key moving average (the 20 EMA) and enter with the trend. Higher win rate than breakouts, slightly worse RR.
Best markets
- Instruments: liquid stocks, ETFs, major cryptocurrencies
- Timeframe: daily or 4-hour
- Market regime: strong, established trend (avoid in ranging markets)
Setup criteria
- Price above 50 SMA (long-term uptrend)
- 20 EMA sloping up
- Price pulls back to touch or slightly pierce the 20 EMA
- Bullish reversal candle at the EMA (hammer, bullish engulfing)
Entry rules
- Wait for a bullish reversal candle to close at or near the 20 EMA
- Enter on the next bar's open after the reversal candle
Stop loss rules
- Stop = low of the reversal candle − small buffer
- Alternative: 1 × ATR(14) below entry
Position size rules
- Risk per trade = account × 1%
- Position size = risk amount ÷ (entry price − stop price)
Use the position size calculator.
Exit rules
- Take profit: previous swing high, or 2R minimum (use RR calculator)
- Optional: trail stop below the 20 EMA once price moves 1R in your favor
Risk warnings
- Pullbacks can become reversals — the stop is your protection
- Don't take pullbacks against the higher-timeframe trend
- Wait for the reversal candle; entering on a "touch" of the EMA without confirmation leads to early stops
When this strategy shines
- Strong uptrending markets with steady pullback behavior (e.g., index ETFs in bull phases)
- Pairs well with the dual MA crossover — use the crossover to define trend, then take pullbacks
Common mistake
Entering before the reversal candle closes. The candle can look bullish mid-bar and reverse completely by close. Always wait for the close.
Strategy is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice.