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Using Pivot Points in Forex Trading

Reviewed by Akhilesh GantiFact checked by Ryan Eichler

One tool that provides forex traders with potential support and resistance levels and helps to minimize risk is the pivot point and its derivatives. The use of reference points such as support and resistance, help determine when to enter the market, place stops, and take profits. However, many beginning traders divert too much attention to technical indicators including the moving average convergence divergence (MACD) and the relative strength index (RSI). While useful, these indicators fail to identify a point that defines risk. Unknown risk can lead to margin calls, but calculated risk significantly improves the odds of success over the long haul.

In this article, we’ll argue why a combination of pivot points and traditional technical tools is more powerful than technical tools alone, and show the usefulness of pivot points in the forex market.

Pivot Points 101

A pivot point is used to reflect a change in market sentiment and to determine overall trends across a time interval, as though they were hinges from which trading swings either high or low. Originally employed by floor traders on equity and futures exchanges, they now are most commonly used in conjunction with support and resistance levels to confirm trends and minimize risk.

Similar to other forms of trend line analysis, pivot points focus on the important relationships between high, low, and closing prices between trading days; that is, the previous day’s prices are used to calculate the pivot point for the current trading day. Even though they can be applied to nearly any trading instrument, pivot points have proved exceptionally useful in the forex (FX) market, especially when trading currency pairs.

Forex markets are very liquid and trade with very high volume attributes that reduce the impact of market manipulation that might otherwise inhibit the support and resistance projections generated by pivot points.

Support and Resistance Levels

While pivot points are identified based on specific calculations to help spot important resistance and resistance levels, the support and resistance levels themselves rely on more subjective placements to help spot possible breakout trading opportunities.

Support and resistance lines are a theoretical construct used to explain the seeming unwillingness of traders to push the price of an asset beyond certain points. If bull trading appears to rise to a consistent level prior to stopping and retracing/reversing, it is said to have met resistance. If bear trading appears to hit a floor at a certain price point before consistently trading up again, it is said to have met support. Traders look for prices to break through identified support/resistance levels as a sign of new trends developing and a chance for quick profits. A great number of trading strategies rely on support/resistance lines.

Calculating Pivots

There are several derivative formulas that help evaluate support and resistance pivot points between currencies in a forex pair. These values can be tracked over time to judge the probability of prices moving past certain levels. The calculation begins with the previous day’s prices:

Pivot Point for Current = High (previous) + Low (previous) + Close (previous)
3

The pivot point can then be used to calculate estimated support and resistance for the current trading day.

Resistance 1 = (2 x Pivot Point) – Low (previous period)
Support 1 = (2 x Pivot Point) – High (previous period)
Resistance 2 = (Pivot Point – Support 1) + Resistance 1
Support 2 = Pivot Point – (Resistance 1 – Support 1)
Resistance 3 = (Pivot Point – Support 2) + Resistance 2
Support 3 = Pivot Point – (Resistance 2 – Support 2)

To get a full understanding of how well pivot points can work, compile statistics for the EUR/USD on how distant each high and low has been from each calculated resistance (R1, R2, R3) and support level (S1, S2, S3).

To do the calculation yourself:

  • Calculate the pivot points, support levels and resistance levels for x number of days.
  • Subtract the support pivot points from the actual low of the day (Low – S1, Low – S2, Low – S3).
  • Subtract the resistance pivot points from the actual high of the day (High – R1, High – R2, High – R3).
  • Calculate the average for each difference.

The results since the inception of the euro (January 1, 1999, with the first trading day on January 4, 1999):

  • The actual low is, on average, 1 pip below Support 1.
  • The actual high is, on average, 1 pip below Resistance 1.
  • The actual low is, on average, 53 pips above Support 2.
  • The actual high is, on average, 53 pips below Resistance 2.
  • The actual low is, on average, 158 pips above Support 3.
  • The actual high is, on average, 159 pips below Resistance 3.

Judging Probabilities

The statistics indicate that the calculated pivot points of S1 and R1 are a decent gauge for the actual high and low of the trading day.

Going a step farther, we calculated the number of days that the low was lower than each S1, S2, and S3 and the number of days that the high was higher than each R1, R2, and R3.

The result: there have been 2,026 trading days since the inception of the euro as of October 12, 2006.

  • The actual low has been lower than S1 892 times, or 44% of the time.
  • The actual high has been higher than R1 853 times, or 42% of the time.
  • The actual low has been lower than S2 342 times, or 17% of the time.
  • The actual high has been higher than R2 354 times, or 17% of the time.
  • The actual low has been lower than S3 63 times, or 3% of the time.
  • The actual high has been higher than R3 52 times, or 3% of the time.

This information is useful to a trader; if you know that the pair slips below S1 44% of the time, you can place a stop below S1 with confidence, understanding that probability is on your side. Additionally, you may want to take profits just below R1 because you know that the high for the day exceeds R1 only 42% of the time. Again, the probabilities are with you.

It is important to understand, however, that these are probabilities and not certainties. On average, the high is 1 pip below R1 and exceeds R1 42% of the time. This neither means that the high will exceed R1 four days out of the next 10, nor that the high is always going to be 1 pip below R1.

The power in this information lies in the fact that you can confidently gauge potential support and resistance ahead of time, have reference points to place stops and limits, and, most importantly, limit risk while putting yourself in a position to profit.

Applying the Information

The pivot point and its derivatives are potential support and resistance. The examples below show a setup using a pivot point in conjunction with the popular RSI oscillator.

RSI Divergence at Pivot Resistance/Support

This is typically a high reward-to-risk trade. The risk is well-defined due to the recent high (or low for a buy).

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021

The pivot points in the above examples are calculated using weekly data. The above example shows that from August 16 to 17, R1 held as solid resistance (first circle) at 1.2854 and the RSI divergence suggested that the upside was limited. This suggests that there is an opportunity to go short on a break below R1 with a stop at the recent high and a limit at the pivot point, which is now the support level:

  • Sell short at 1.2853.
  • Stop at the recent high at 1.2885.
  • Limit at the pivot point at 1.2784.

This first trade netted a 69 pip profit with 32 pips of risk. The reward to risk ratio was 2.16.

The next week produced nearly the exact same setup. The week began with a rally to and just above R1 at 1.2908, which was also accompanied by bearish divergence. The short signal is generated on the decline back below R1 at which point we can sell short with a stop at the recent high and a limit at the pivot point (which is now support):

  • Sell short at 1.2907.
  • Stop at the recent high at 1.2939.
  • Limit at the pivot point at 1.2802.

This trade netted a 105 pip profit with just 32 pips of risk. The reward to risk ratio was 3.28.

Rules for Setup

For traders who are bearish and shorting the market, the approach to setting pivot points is different than for the bullish, long trader.

For Shorts

1. Identify bearish divergence at the pivot point, either R1, R2 or R3 (most common at R1).
2. When the price declines back below the reference point (it could be the pivot point, R1, R2, R3), initiate a short position with a stop at the recent swing high.
3. Place a limit (take profit) order at the next level. If you sold at R2, your first target would be R1. In this case, former resistance becomes support and vice versa.

For Longs

1. Identify bullish divergence at the pivot point, either S1, S2 or S3 (most common at S1).
2. When price rallies back above the reference point (it could be the pivot point, S1, S2, S3), initiate a long position with a stop at the recent swing low.
3. Place a limit (take profit) order at the next level (if you bought at S2, your first target would be S1 … former support becomes resistance and vice versa).

The Bottom Line

Pivot points are changes in market trading direction that, when charted in succession, can be used to identify overall price trends. They use the prior time period’s high, low and closing numbers to assess levels of support or resistance in the near future. Pivot points may be the most commonly used leading indicators in technical analysis. There are many different types of pivot points, each with their own formulas and derivative formulas, but their implied trading philosophies are the same.

When combined with other technical tools, pivot points can also indicate when there is a large and sudden influx of traders entering the market simultaneously. These market inflows often lead to breakouts and opportunities for profits for range-bound forex traders. Pivot points allow them to guess which important price points should be used to enter, exit or place stop losses.

Pivot points can be calculated for any time frame. A day trader can use daily data to calculate the pivot points each day, a swing trader can use weekly data to calculate the pivot points for each week and a position trader can use monthly data to calculate the pivot points at the beginning of each month.

Investors can even use yearly data to approximate significant levels for the coming year. The analysis and trading philosophy remains the same regardless of the time frame. That is, the calculated pivot points give the trader an idea of where support and resistance are for the coming period, but the trader must always be prepared to act – because nothing in trading is more important than preparedness.

Read the original article on Investopedia.

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