Quote from Lefty62151:
OK then moving on, I am posting a chart of todays price action in the context of weekly pivots.
In his book titled "A Complete Guide to Technical Trading Tactics, John Person suggests that traders keep track of weekly and monthly pivots. He also suggests that combining them with candlestick formations (reversals like engulfing patterns for instance) can help a trader to avoid buying a reversal or selling the bottom of a weekly move.
John suggests that typically a weekly or monthly high/low is usually achieved on a single day and then price reacts off that push. In my experience it depends on the price level. For instance if the price is an important even number (and you are trading the S&P), it is likely that you will see a pullback before price "takes out" that level. Pit traders used to use the phrase "first through the even" to signify the way price would act when it penetrated an important price level that was represented by an even number. Also as I have suggested before, price needs to develop momentum to take out a pivot. That is why pivots are often taken out by a wide range bar. This is the equivalent of taking a run up to a fence before you try to jump over it.
If you look at the first 8 or ten bars of today's price action, you can see that price could not develop enough momentum to take out the pivot. Look at the widest range bar and you will see that it "ran out of gas" after penetrating the line. Not enough bids to sustain the move. This is typical of a thin summer day in June.
Notice that the weekly pivot puts a nice "floor" in under the open today. Also if you scan left you can see how the weekly pivot biscects the wide range bar down on the previous day's closing range. Again in my experience the midline of a wide range bar will often serve as a "natural" stop for price action.