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Range Trading - 4 Range Types and How To Trade Them
Range Trading - 4 Range Types and How To Trade Them
Trade Them
• Trading
• Learning
• Strategies
Range trading is one of the most basic trading methods in forex. It complements other
strategies such as trend following and breakout trading but many use it successfully on
its own.
It is not difficult to spot a range in a price chart. In most financial charts, there are
obvious areas where the price seems to follow what looks like a predictable path.
This article covers the most common types of ranges in forex markets and how to trade
them.
Range Trading: The Basics
Ranges form where the price is constrained between a support area and a resistance
area.
The basic way to trade ranges is to enter (or exit) near to the range boundaries. That
means selling when the price is at the top of the range and buying when it is at the
bottom. The top of the range provides a resistance area to price rises and the bottom a
support area for price falls.
As with all trading systems, success lies in attention to detail and correct execution of
the technique.
Range Types
Rectangular range
With a rectangular range the price moves sideways between an upper resistance and a
lower support which are roughly horizontal. These kinds of ranges are common at all
time scales, though they are not as commonplace as channels or continuation ranges
(see below). It is easy to spot horizontal ranges on the chart either visually or
with indicators. The horizontal range typically shows:
The bottom indicator in Figure 2 is the MACD indicator. The MACD histogram line
(shown in black) crossing downwards through the signal line (orange) indicates a sell
signal. An upward crossing through the signal line indicates a buy. The height of the
MACD line indicates the level to which the price is overbought or oversold.
Indicators like MACD are useful if you are using automation. The ATR (average true
range), RSI and standard moving averages are also helpful. There are also
some specialized tools available for automated trading.
Channels can extend over very long periods, sometimes years. These are of course
trends but in reality, most of the short duration trading opportunities will happen within
the ranges that develop within the trend. For this reason channels can be traded with
a trend following strategy or a breakout strategy.
When short duration channels form against the main trend, these are
often continuation patterns. These include wedges, flags, and pennants (see below).
With channel ranges especially the shorter duration ones, breakouts tend to happen in
the opposite direction. In an upward sloping range, the most likely break is to the
downside. In a downward sloping range, the most likely break is on the upside. This
is not a cast iron guarantee by any means, but it is a useful rule of thumb in technical
analysis.
Figure 6 below illustrates this. A downside break happens, in a bearish rising wedge.
This gives back nearly all of the gains that the upward trend made.
Figure 4 shows a longer bearish channel. Here the range sees a strong upside breakout.
These examples demonstrate how the price often “pulls back”.
Figure 4: Downward diagonal range with breakout. © forexop
For the reasons above, depending on the range slope and the currency pair, some
traders prefer to trade one direction or another, rather than trading both ways.
These patterns can occur at virtually any timescale. They can be traded as ranges in
their own right, or as breakouts – depending on your trading time horizon. These
patterns can produce strong bullish or bearish breakouts when the prevailing trend
resumes, so many prefer to trade them as breakouts rather than ranges.
Irregular Ranges
With most ranges, the pattern is not obvious on first sight. In such formations, the price
movements take place around an central pivot line with support and resistance
areas forming around it. Tools such as trend line analyzers and moving averages are
useful in marking out these ranges and identifying where the support and resistance
areas are.
Some traders prefer to trade these kinds of ranges towards the central pivot axis rather
than at the extremes. In this way, they aim to trade out extremes of price on the
assumption that it will revert to a mean (the central pivot axis). For more on this
technique see this article on pivot trading.
With this strategy, you use a smaller profit target and seek to capture the price
movements as the price pushes towards the central axis of the range.
As mentioned above once the price hits the range wall, the chance of breakout (or
partial which hits a stop loss) is always there. Therefore, by trading at the edges of the
range the trader is relying on the price turning successfully in their favor. By trading
the central area, you can reduce the risks of turns at the edges of the range.
Wait for the price to reverse at the boundary or at about 2/3ds from the boundary
of the wall. You will usually see consolidation around these levels before a reversal
takes place.
Confirm the move with at least two candles that mark the direction away from the
When trading the range, we try not to “chase the price” on a breakout. Range
breakouts can be strong and will take profits along with them. If you are caught the
wrong side of the move, it is best to cut the loss and wait for another entry opportunity.
Likewise, it is best not to try to trade back towards the range after a breakout. With
well-established ranges, several retests of the boundary are common before a full
breakout. Use the retest as an exit opportunity.
For this reason, we avoid the trade when a break looks possible even if the price moves
firmly back inside the range. This margin of error means giving up some profit, but it
leads to fewer loss trades.