EMA 20 Pullback Bounce Trading Strategy
The simplest high-probability trend continuation: in a confirmed uptrend, buy the first rejection off the 20-period EMA. Clean, mechanical, and works on every market with sufficien…
32 trading strategies tagged as Low Risk (risk profile). Each template is fully documented with entry rules, indicators, risk management, and configuration parameters.
The simplest high-probability trend continuation: in a confirmed uptrend, buy the first rejection off the 20-period EMA. Clean, mechanical, and works on every market with sufficien…
Enter at institutional order blocks where smart money has placed significant orders, creating high-probability reversal zones.
Fair Value Gaps (imbalances between buyers and sellers) tend to get filled as price returns to them. Enter at the 50% level of a bullish FVG during a return, targeting the next liq…
The Bat pattern is a precision harmonic formation with a 0.886 XA retracement at point D. One of the deepest harmonic entries. The tight stop beyond D creates excellent risk:reward…
Enter on pullbacks within a confirmed trend. Wait for price to retrace to dynamic support (EMA/MA zone) before entering in the direction of the trend.
Hidden divergence signals trend continuation. When price makes a higher low but RSI/MACD makes a lower low, it indicates the underlying trend is strong.
The 200-period SMA on the daily chart is the most-watched long-term support/resistance level in equities. Bounces off a rising 200-SMA in a long-term uptrend are among the highest-…
Trade high-probability reversals using pin bars (long wick rejection candles) at key support and resistance levels.
When price breaks out of a clear range but fails to hold above the breakout level, trapped breakout buyers become forced sellers. Fade the failed breakout for a move back through t…
Three-candle reversal patterns. Morning Star (bullish reversal at bottom) and Evening Star (bearish reversal at top) are among the most reliable candlestick patterns.
A hammer candlestick (small body, long lower wick, little/no upper wick) forming at a key support level signals strong buying pressure absorbing selling. The confluence of pattern …
The most reliable reversal pattern. Three peaks with the middle (head) being the highest, connected by a neckline. Break of neckline triggers entry.
After a strong upward thrust (flagpole), price consolidates in a tight downward-sloping channel (flag). The break above the flag signals continuation of the primary trend with meas…
Renko bricks filter noise by only printing when price moves a fixed amount. Trade color changes with trend confirmation for clean entries.
Range bars build only on price movement, not time, making VWAP crosses cleaner and more significant. Trade VWAP reclaims on range bars for noise-filtered intraday signals with natu…
The Point of Control (POC) is the price with the most volume traded. Price tends to gravitate back to this level, trade the reversion.
High Volume Nodes (HVNs) are price levels where significant trading activity has occurred. They act as strong magnets and support/resistance. Trade the bounce off an untested HVN f…
Trade the first retest of fresh (untested) supply or demand zones. Fresh zones have the highest probability as unfilled orders remain.
Drop-Base-Rally (DBR): price drops sharply, consolidates briefly (base), then explodes higher. The base marks a fresh demand zone where institutional buying absorbed all selling. F…
Rally-Base-Drop (RBD): price rallies, bases briefly, then drops sharply. The base is a supply zone where institutional selling absorbed buying pressure. Fresh RBD zones reliably ca…
Previous day high (PDH) and low (PDL) are the most watched institutional levels. Trade the breakout or rejection at these levels.
Round numbers (1.0000 in FX, $100 in stocks, $50,000 in crypto) act as psychological support and resistance because retail traders cluster orders at these levels. Trade the first c…
Break of Structure (BOS) confirms trend continuation. When price breaks a significant swing high/low, it validates the current trend direction.
The H1 (High 1) entry: in an established bull trend, after the first pullback bar fails to make a new low below a pullback swing, enter long on a stop order above that bar's high. …
The Unicorn model combines a Break of Structure with a Fair Value Gap that overlaps with an Order Block. This triple confluence creates ultra-high-probability entries.
The Unicorn combines three institutional concepts at one zone: a Break of Structure, a Fair Value Gap left by the break, and an Order Block that overlaps the FVG. This triple confl…
The Spring occurs when price dips below accumulation range support to sweep stops, then rapidly reverses back inside. This is the smart money shakeout.
Sign of Strength (SOS): after accumulation completes, price advances with wide range and expanding volume. The first clear evidence institutional buying has overwhelmed supply. Ent…
When price deviates 2+ standard deviations from its mean, reversion is statistically likely. Use Z-Score to measure deviation and time entries.
Trade the spread between two correlated instruments. When correlation breaks, the spread is expected to revert, go long the underperformer, short the outperformer.
Calculate the Z-score of price relative to its 50-period moving average. Extreme Z-scores (±2 or ±2.5) indicate statistically significant deviation, fade these extremes expecting m…
In a long-term uptrend (above 200-day SMA), buy when 2-period RSI drops below 10 (severe short-term oversold) and exit when price closes above the 5-day SMA. Designed specifically …