Price action support resistance forex

By: ProGuru Date: 21.07.2017

A major proponent of price action trading is marking the key support and resistance levels. Where traders mark their levels are crucial to making high probability trades and it is vital that traders get it right if they want to be successful. In this article, I will go through the exact processes that traders need to use, including the routine that traders should go through to mark up their charts, the time frame charts they need to use to have the most accurate levels and exactly how traders can use price flips to trade on the right side of the market when price makes a quick break either higher or lower.

This trading lesson is one of the most in-depth lessons on the Forex School Online website because it is very important that traders get their processes around key levels correct. Normally we like to keep our lessons as brief as possible, but a lot of the questions lately have centered around support and resistance, so to help traders we have made this guide to get price action traders on the right track.

Please make sure you get a nice hot drink and a quiet spot with no distractions so that you are able to take in everything. The best way for traders to mark their charts with support and resistance, is to mark them up before even looking for a trade.

It is very important they do it this way around and not after they have already found a trade because it can cut down on a heck of a lot of time and also cut down on a lot of false trades that are not from the best key areas. Traders need to go through their charts at the start of the week and mark their key support and resistance levels that they want to make trades from on the daily charts. The daily charts are the best and most clear charts to mark levels from and these levels on the daily charts can be used to make trades from on the intraday charts.

For example; trades on the 4hr and 8hr charts can be made using the same levels that have been marked using the daily chart. The reason it is highly advisable traders mark their levels on the daily charts and then also use these levels to make trades with their intraday trades such as the 4hr chart, is because the smaller the time frame the more levels there become and the weaker the levels also tend to become. If the trader does it the opposite way around and marks their levels after they have spotted the trade setup such as a pin bar or engulfing bar , etc.

Often when doing this the trader will find a support or resistance that really is not there to be found or convince themselves of the trade. Other traders will be filled with doubt about if the area they are entering at really is a solid one.

If, however the trader marks their levels first, this risk is taken away and the trader is always assured of entering from good areas of support or resistance. All the trader has to do then is mark their key levels and wait for price to move into one of their pre-marked levels and then look for a price action setup. This way there can be no confusing if the price has moved into a key level because the levels are pre-marked before a trade setup even forms.

Marking up charts this way also cuts down on time. If the trader is hunting for setups in every time period and then looking for the support and resistance, they have to look at every chart in every time period to check if a trigger signal has been formed. If they do find a setup, they then have to work back to see if it matches up with a support or resistance level.

If a trader is to trade the 4hr, 8hr and daily chart this would mean that every time that one of these time frame closes they would have to go through every single chart to see if a signal has formed and then if a signal has formed, they then have to work back to see if it has formed at a good level.

This severely limits how much the trader can get through and also adds a lot of time to the whole process. The most efficient and fastest way to have charts set up is to have it so that traders can just quickly flick through the daily time frame charts one by one to see if price has reached any of the support or resistance levels that have already been pre-marked and then only stop if price has moved close to any of the key levels.

price action support resistance forex

Doing it this way ensures that price action traders are always only hunting for trades at key levels and it also cuts out a heck of a lot of time because they are not going through a lot of unnecessary charts they would be with the other method. The only time they move to these charts is when price is at their key pre-marked level and they are hunting for a trigger signal.

Drawing Support and Resistance on Forex Charts » Learn To Trade

This literally cuts out hours. Quite often traders get into a habit of marking their levels on their charts and they have all these pretty charts with levels on them, but before long they have forgotten what the reason is for marking support and resistance in the first place. With the method I described above of pre-marking levels first and then letting the market come to the trader so that the trader is not letting the market dictate to them, it is important that the trader remembers exactly why they mark their levels.

The only reason support and resistance levels are ever marked is because the level is a very good one and the trader thinks if price makes it back to the level, it could be a high chance of making a high probability trade. It is important that traders keep this in mind when marking their levels. I often see a lot of charts where very minor levels are marked and these levels are often the levels where if price does make it back to, the trader is not going to make a trade from, so to mark the level is just a waste of time.

The only levels that ever need to be marked are the levels where traders are going to want to make trades from if price makes it back to. All the other targets and stops etc, are all worked out well after a trade is found, but before that a trade has to be identified and to do that solid key levels are needed.

Always remember when looking for levels; you only want to mark a level if you are going to want to play a trade from it. If it is a minor level or a level you would not play a trade from then it is a waste of time putting it on your chart and just getting in the way of the price action.

Price action traders are not just pattern traders and can use a lot of information from a price action chart to help with their trade. With this in mind; candlesticks offer price action traders a lot of help with what they need because they show traders not only the open and close, but also where price went during the session. For this reason, when marking support and resistance the candlestick chart should always be used.

The major problem with the line charts when marking support and resistance is that it can cut off the swing points and smooth out the price action out, not showing the true extent of the swing highs and lows, whereas with the candlesticks, traders get to see everything. When using candlesticks, traders can also read more information from candle to candle when marking support and resistance that cannot be achieved with line charts.

When traders are marking levels they need to take into account both the wicks and the bodies of the candlesticks to match up the best levels. I go into depth about how traders can tell whether a level has been broken or contained in this lesson here: All that is needed are two levels maximum sometimes less ; one level above price and the other below price.

If price breaks one of the two levels, then price is reassessed and a new level is placed in the new spot. It is however, very important that the chart is kept clean and not overrun by other things taking over the chart so that traders can at all times read what is happening with the price action because the price action is king. Whilst traders who have been trading price action for a while will look at the chart below and either laugh or think it is a joke, the chart below is exactly how thousands upon thousands of traders charts look all around the world.

None of the things on the chart are helping the trader and more to the point; the actual support and resistance levels that are on the chart are not doing their job. Remember what the levels are for and you always need to be able to read the price action. Whilst a lot of charts are going to have two levels on them, that does not mean every chart will always have two levels. As discussed above; the whole reason for marking levels is so that traders have a pre-marked level for hunting trades.

Some markets you will mark one level and then in others you will have no levels to mark at all. An example of where you may only have one level is in a trending market where because the trend is so strong you may be looking to trade only with the trend so the level you mark is from support or resistance within the current trend. An example of when you would not mark any levels is when price is so choppy or in such a tight consolidation period that you are waiting for price to break out and for the market to show its cards first before you then look to mark some clearer levels.

The best trades are played from the best key support and resistance levels and these levels should be plainly obvious. If it takes you a really long time to find a level on a chart, then the chances are that the level is not an obvious level that you should be looking to take trades from and the only levels you need marked on your charts are the levels you want to look to take trades from.

Traders need to have a set routine for when they go through their daily charts and mark up their levels. For me, I go through my charts each Sunday night and mark all my levels for the following week. I look for all the levels I am looking to make possible trades at for the week ahead. If the price, then breaks any of those levels during the week I will reassess and mark a new level.

With this mindset of traders marking levels at key areas that they want to make trades at and not just any areas of support and resistance, it is a good approach to look for levels. The best and easiest way to mark support and resistance is to look from the top of the chart down and start matching the swing points. A swing point is simply a point where price has made a run either higher or lower and found support or resistance and then reversed the other way.

See the chart below for an explanation for what a swing point is;. The chart below shows a chart with the obvious swing points marked without the key levels. This is how a trader could look at it if they were at the stage where they were trying to work out what a swing point is and from there they could then match the swing points up to mark their key levels. The chart below still has the swing points marked, but it now has the key levels marked and shows how by using the obvious swing points you can mark the levels on the charts.

You can also use previous price action information and swing points when marking these levels because you will often notice that if price is finding support or resistance at a key level now, there is a high chance it also did in the past.

Keep in mind that support and resistance is a very basic fight between the bulls and the bears or the buyers and the sellers. When the bulls buyers push the price higher it will eventually move into resistance where bears sellers will move price lower. When the bears sellers move price lower, price will eventually move into support where the bulls buyers will gain control and push price higher.

The chart below shows a chart with key levels both above and below price that a trader may be using to hunt for trades. The chart below is in an up-trend and only has one clear support level that is marked where the trader could be looking to hunt for a long trade within the trend. For example; price may be holding as a solid support level and then price breaks through the support level and this level could become a price flip level and look to become a new resistance level.

This is a pattern that works time and time again in the Forex markets and is one of the best lessons traders can learn for marking their charts and also looking for high probability trades. Old levels are constantly flipping and holding as new levels and this can happen from as far back as years that price will continue to flip and respect the same price flip level.

The chart below shows how a price flip works in action;. For traders to make trades with price flips and mark them into their charts, they need to be able to mark these price flip levels before they have been confirmed. What I mean by that is; a lot of the time when traders are marking these new price flip levels, the price would have just broken out of a new support or resistance level and the trader will be looking for that same level that price broke out of to hold as a new price flip level.

This level will not, as yet be confirmed as a new level, so traders need to make sure that when they are taking trades from these price flip levels that they enter with solid and high probability price action trigger signals like the ones taught in the Forex School Online Courses. An example of this scenario is; price breaks lower and through support.

Price moves back higher and into this new level, that the trader is now looking to hold as a new resistance level. This is a new price flip level and it is not confirmed yet because price has not rejected it in any way. Because it has not been confirmed we cannot be sure that price will reject it, so traders need to ensure they use high probability price action at this level to confirm the rejection.

These price flip levels in the trends can be super levels to look for trades. The chart below highlights how a pin bar could be taken at a price flip level after price broke through the support and then reversed back up to test the new price flip resistance level. See the charts below for further explanation on how a price flip could work out;. Price moves lower and finds support. Price stalls, before finally bursting through the support level and continuing lower.

Price retraces back higher to test the old support area which is now looking to become a price flip and new resistance area. This old support level is yet to be confirmed as a new resistance level and price could potentially cut straight through it and back higher like a hot knife through butter. Whilst these levels can be super areas to take trades from, it is also important that traders ensure they are using high probability trigger signals to to confirm the levels.

Price fires off a pin bar reversal at the new price flip resistance area which is rejecting the resistance.

This trigger signal is the confirmation the trader needs to enter a trade at this new key level. The major reason I have made this longer style tutorial on how traders should go about marking their support and resistance levels is because I often get emails from traders who are worried that they are not doing it right or that they are not getting where they want to be quick enough.

The vast majority of these traders are doing the basics correctly, but their processes and how they actually go about marking their levels are sloppy. Their routines are costing them hours and the mindset they are using is not one of looking for trades because they are just so focussed on putting levels on their charts correctly at the right spots.

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One of the quickest ways to get good at marking levels is to watch others experts and match their levels up against yours. A good place you can follow where I post commentary with charts every day with levels is in the Chart in Focus section. The charts in focus are where each day after New York close I make a post about something that is happening in the markets. You can find this section here: Chart in Focus Forex Daily Commentary.

You will also quickly improve by doing the same routine day in and day out and also by going through each Sunday and marking up your charts for the following week ahead.

You can also join the Lifetime Membership at Forex School Online that has an Online community forum with coaches, senior traders and like minded traders who are all regularly posting their charts with levels for discussions.

I really hope you have enjoyed this in-depth lesson on how to mark your key support and resistance levels, the process you need to take when marking them and the mindset that is needed. If you have any questions you can either post them in the comments below or contact me HERE.

Johnathon Fox is a professional Forex and Futures trader who also acts as a mentor and coach to thousands of aspiring traders from countries right around the world. Johnathon specialises in helping traders reach their full trading potential by helping them master the art of price action trading and correct money management techniques.

Very good summary here. Started a demo on Pepperstone mid feb, 5K usd, has now turned to 22K usd! My Live account follows the positive direction with smaller steps though, since I am a littel more carefull here. Positive the last month though. It is great to see your dedication and hard work starting to pay off. Keep up the good work and continue to prosper mate! John, such an excellent lesson. Once I fear forex, forex is risky, tough, so hard to make money, but after starting reading your website, now I feel, forex is not so hard if some important rules are followed.

Now I feel so much confident and all credit goes to only you. Keep an eye out for another lesson on trading in ranges I am about to put our real soon I think you will both enjoy! Thank you very much for Johnathon. It is very important article. And how i save it in my computer or print it. Because sometimes i go in place no internet therefore i need print it or save my computer.

Be Serious, Know what your doing. Please, Goldman Sachs made a fortune today. They are the makert. They front run your trades and know where all the money is and go against it. Got to be a Bull.

The Ultimate Guide to Marking Support and Resistance

Bad internals, no conviction on the buy side. Unless, YOU are ONE of the Goldman Guys who gets the phone call and the trade. Think, your smarter than, Got to be a Bull.

Would, No fear in the makerts be the biggest of warnings? Have a Great Weekend. To be honest though it really does not matter or affect us either way whether their trades tank or make billions. I guess it shows that their trade calls can go south the same as us, but at the end of the day they have sections within their bank doing the same thing we are; trying to make money.

price action support resistance forex

Yes, there are many different participants in the markets. Banks have these and the do the same things as us; the look to build an edge over the market. For you as a trader you need to focus on what you can control and that is trading to make money using all the information in front of you, to build an edge that makes money overtime using everything that everyone is doing in the price action on the charts. Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.

Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; text-decoration: The Ultimate Guide to Marking Support and Resistance on Price Action Charts was last modified: March 9th, by Johnathon Fox. About Johnathon Fox Johnathon Fox is a professional Forex and Futures trader who also acts as a mentor and coach to thousands of aspiring traders from countries right around the world. Thanks again for your TOP guidance.

price action support resistance forex

Your dedicated lifetime student, Henning. All the best, Johnathon. Thank you for relentlessly showing us the "light". Thank you very much Johanthaon. I'm an FSO member, but this was a really well put together reminder! Cancel reply Login with your Social ID.

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