Why Successful Traders Use Fibonacci and the
Golden Ratio
Support and resistance levels on bar charts
are a major component in the study of technical
analysis. Many traders, including myself, use
support and resistance levels to identify entry
and exit points when trading markets. When
determining support and resistance levels on
charts, one should not overlook the key
Fibonacci percentage "retracement" levels. I
will detail specific Fibonacci percentages in
this feature, but first I think it's important
to examine how those numbers were derived, and
by whom.
Leonardo Fibonacci da Pisa was a famous 13th
century mathematician. He helped introduce
European countries to the decimal system,
including the positioning of zero as the first
digit in the number scale. Fibonacci also
discovered a number sequence called "the
Fibonacci sequence." That sequence is as
follows: 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34 and so on to
infinity. Adding the two previous numbers in the
sequence comes up with the next number.
Importantly, after the first several numbers
in the Fibonacci sequence, the ratio of any
number to the next higher number is
approximately .618, and the next lower number is
1.618. These two figures (.618 and 1.618) are
known as the Golden Ratio or Golden Mean. Its
proportions are pleasing to the human eyes and
ears. It appears throughout biology, art, music
and architecture. Here are just a few examples
of shapes that are based on the Golden Ratio:
playing cards, sunflowers, snail shells, the
galaxies of outer space, hurricanes and even DNA
molecules. William Hoffer, in the Smithsonian
Magazine, wrote in 1975: "The continual
occurrence of Fibonacci numbers and the Golden
Spiral in nature explain precisely why the
proportion of .618034 to 1 is so pleasing in
art. Man can see the image of life in art that
is based on the Golden Mean."
I could provide more details about the
Fibonacci sequence and the Golden Ratio and
Golden Spiral, but space and time here will not
permit. However, I do suggest you read the book
"Elliott Wave Principle" by Frost and Prechter,
published by John Wiley & Sons. Indeed, much of
the basis of the Elliott Wave Principle is based
upon Fibonacci numbers and the Golden Ratio.
Two Fibonacci technical percentage
retracement levels that are most important in
market analysis are 38.2% and 62.8%. Most market
technicians will track a "retracement" of a
price uptrend from its beginning to its most
recent peak. Other important retracement
prcentages include 75%, 50% and 33%. For
example, if a price trend starts at zero, peaks
at 100, and then declines to 50, it would be a
50% retracement. The same levels can be applied
to a market that is in a downtrend and then
experiences an upside "correction."
The element I find most fascinating about
Fibonacci numbers, the Golden Ratio and the
Elliott Wave principle, as they are applied to
technical analysis of markets--and the reason I
am sharing this information with you--is that
these principles are a reflection of human
nature and human behavior.
The longer I am in this business and the more
I study the behavior of markets, the more I
realize human behavior patterns and market price
movement patterns are deeply intertwined. |