How to Use Support & Resistance to Trade Oil
In the above previous lesson trades examples we have looked at support & resistance levels that were not broken. These points held because they were strong enough.
However, sometimes support and resistances levels are not strong enough to stop movement of the crude trading price moving in a certain direction. When crude oil price moves past these support and resistance points we say that these levels have been broken. That's why we always use a stop loss when trading these levels, just in case they do not hold.
But what happens when these levels are broken, well the levels change one to the other, for examples
- When a support is broken it becomes a resistance
- When a resistance is broken it becomes a support
Using charts, the examples below show an illustration of what happens when these levels break:
Support is broken it becomes a resistance
In the oil example shown below, the support that had been tested two times could not hold the third time, the sellers were able to push the crude oil price down past this level.
However, the crude trading price bounced back up again, but this time the crude trading price could not go up beyond this line. The crude oil price was there after quickly pushed down by the sellers. This was because the line that was a support had now turned into a resistance.
In oil trading when a support is taken out, the stop losses placed below that level are also taken out, thus reducing the momentum that the buyers had. This give sellers an opportunity to short sell the crude oil & place their stops just above this level which now turns into a resistance level.
Resistance is broken it becomes a support
In the oil example shown below using the crude oil chart, the resistance level that had been tested two times could not hold the third time, the bulls were able to push the crude oil price up past this level.
When the crude trading price tried to go down again it could not go lower than this level. The crude trading price was there after quickly pushed further upwards by the buyers. This was because the line that was a resistance had now turned into a support. This is what happens in oil trading, when a resistance level is broken it turn into a support level.
Traders who had closed their short sell crude oil trades will now open long trades & place their stop losses just below this level.
Major and Minor Resistance Levels
In oil charts the resistance & support levels formed are either major resistance/support points or minor resistance/support points.
Major Resistance/Support levels
In Major Resistance/Support levels crude trading price will stay at this level for some time, either the crude trading price will consolidate at this point or form a rectangle oil chart pattern when crude trading price gets to this point. This level will be tested several times before it is either broken or it holds and crude oil price doesn't get to move past this resistance/support level.
The above examples are good examples of major Resistance and Support Levels.
Minor Resistance/Support levels
In minor resistance & support points the crude oil price will form these points quickly in the short term & then quickly move past these resistance regions and support regions.
Upward Crude Trading Trend: The pattern of this minor resistance and support points will form a sequence of areas whose general direction is upwards.
Upward Oil Trend Series of Support and Resistance
Downward Oil Trend: The pattern of this minor resistance & support points will form a sequence of areas whose general direction is downwards.
Downward Oil Trend Series of Support and Resistance