Fibo Bulkowski
Fibo Bulkowski
Fibo Bulkowski
I show a chart of Flir Systems (FLIR) on the daily scale. Points A, B, and D are major turning points. Point C is a minor reversal. When looking for Fibonacci retraces or extensions, you will want to select turning points that are of the same magnitude. By that I mean look for large, major turning points of similar size, or focus on four smaller turning points, also of the same size. You should probably avoid mixing small and large turning points because that may give you unreliable results (but you can try it). Many software packages will draw the Fibonacci lines on your chart for you. Point D retraces almost 62% of the AB move. The next section explains how I used the chart to compute the retrace.
Fibonacci Retracements
The gure shows an ABCD wave. Think of each turning point as a peak or valley on the price chart, just like in the previous chart. Assume that point A is at 10 and B is at 15. There are three main retrace values that I like to use: 38%, 50% and 62%. How we derive those values and others is not important, nor is the Fibonacci sequence. If we take the price dierence from A to B (15 - 10 = 5) and multiply it by the three Fib values, we get 5 x 38% = 1.90, 5 x 50% = 2.50, and 5 x 62% = 3.10.
When you add those values to A or subtract them from B, you get three possible turning points: 13.10, 12.50, and 11.90. The stock could turn at any of those three values as well as at other values. If I want to buy the stock represented by the chart, I will wait for a 62% retrace and then pounce. That means placing a buy order at 11.90 in this example, or about where point C forms. Other Fibonacci retracement values are 79% and 86%.
The AB move is 5 points (10 to 15), so 38% of that is 1.90 which I add to the price of B (15) to get D (16.90). Thus, if I bought the stock at C, I would consider selling if the stock approached 17. It would not be an automatic sale, but I would search the area for overhead resistance that might cause price to stall. The same math applies to downward price trends. Figure out the length of the rst wave (use BC in this example) and calculate the retrace or extension of that move. Add the retrace value to C (for a higher target) or subtract the extension value from C to get a lower target.
Fibonacci Retracements
Let's start with the daily chart of Boeing (BA). Notice the straight-line run down in November, starting at point A and bottoming at point B. If Fibonacci retracements work, I would expect price to retrace or climb back up that steep decline between 38% and 62%. You can think of this as how far a ball would bounce after you drop it o a building. I show the most common retrace values as three horizontal red lines. The lowest one is a 38% retrace of the AB move. The ball bounces about a third of the way up the building.
The middle line marks a 50% bounce and the top line shows a 62% retrace. I consider the 62% retrace value as most reliable of the three. Trading a stock expecting a reversal at the 38% or 50% retrace values is risky because price often continues moving through them. The chart shows an example of this. Price climbs to C, blowing right through the 38% and 50% retrace lines. The downside to this argument is that if you wait for a 62% retrace, the stock may reverse at 38% or 50%, and you'll remain out of a promising trade. Often you will want to look for nearby support or resistance to better determine where price is going to stop. And when it does approach a retrace value, think of it as an area and not a single price point. For example, the chart shows price approaching but not quite reaching the 62% retrace value, but it's still close. Notice on the far left a congestion area, circled in green. Price overlaps itself for three days before the downtrend resumes. I would view this congestion or overhead resistance area as a weak one, but when coupled with a 62% Fibonacci retrace, it was strong enough to halt the rise and turn price down.
Suspecting that I had made a mistake, I sold it on September 3 for a small prot. The stock continued much lower after I sold.
Fibonacci Extensions
Now let's turn to Fibonacci extensions. You may not have heard of them which suggests it's not a popular technique. I don't use it, but that's just me. Stock prices move in waves. After a strong move, the stock will pause and retrace part of the move followed by a resumption of its run. But how far will it travel? Answer: 38% of the prior move. Look at the chart of Boeing again. The downhill run begins at A and ends at B. The height of the move is 54.65 - 36.17 or 18.48. Multiply the height by 38% to get the extension value and subtract it from the low price at B: 18.48 x
38% = 7.02, 36.17 - 7.02 = 29.14. The stock reaches a low of 29.07 at C. Notice how deliciously close price comes to the target, missing it by just 7 cents. Fibonacci extensions work for upward price moves too. You calculate it in the same manner, using a major swing high to swing low to determine the height, multiply it by 38%, and then add the result to the swing high price to get a target.
In either case, measure the height of the swing move from the dotted line on the bottom to the associated peak and multiply the height by either 0.618 or 1.618, depending on whether the price trend is new (wave two or three) or old (wave four or ve).
Fibonacci Retrace-Stops
Measure the recent swing move from A to B. Take 67% of that move and subtract it from B. Place a stop no closer than the result. That should prevent you from being stopped out in two out of every three trades. For example, if point A is at 20, B is 25, then place a stop below 21.65. The move from A to B is 5 points and 67% of this is 3.35. Subtracted from B gives the stop price of 21.65. As a sanity check, a 3.35 point drop from 25 represents a decline of 13.4%, which is quite high. You might want to narrow your stop, but the risk of being stopped will rise if you do.
At E, 58.85, I bought the stock and notes from the trade say that the Nasdaq had turned up (viewing the 10-minute trend) and the stock looked to be forming a base. The thinking is that after a strong downtrend, price will bounce. I wanted to trade that bounce. How far would the bounce take price? The high at A was 59.90 and the low at B was 58.77, for a dierence of $1.13. Using a Fibonacci retrace of 38%, that would mean a bounce up to 59.20. That became my target price. Price moved up to C and then stalled, so I sold at F (59.22). Notice that price bounced to the rst Fibonacci retrace level (59.20) of the AB move. Notes from the trade say that the Nasdaq was turning down, and I expected price to follow. I sat and watched price drop to G. Using the BC move up, I calculated that the 50% Fibonacci retrace would bottom at 59.25 - ((59.25 - 58.74) x 50%) or about 59.00. The stock reached a low of 58.98. I bought at G (59.00) and rode it up. My notes from the trade said "I think this will turn here. Market (Nasdaq 10 minute trend) just shot up after I bought. This is at the 50% Fibonacci retrace of the prior move down. I assumed that price would double top, or at least attempt to make a second top before tumbling. Failure to make a new high is called a 2B pattern. The 59.20 price seemed like a good target, so that is what I used. When price climbed to H and the "Ticker (a running list of trades as they occur) stalled near the price of the old high at C, and I thought we'd get to 59.20. It didn't so I'm out at 59.19." The stock dropped from there.