Module 3-5: Breakouts, Pullbacks and Fakeouts

Breakouts, Pullbacks and Fakeouts

Context and why they matter

In professional trading, a breakout isn’t just a line being crossed; it’s the expression of a real shift in supply and demand.
During consolidation, price builds up liquidity around range boundaries. When a strong catalyst appears news, a session open, or a higher timeframe break that energy is released, and price moves impulsively in one direction.

Context and why they matter

Anatomy of a valid breakout

A true breakout usually meets these conditions:

  • Candle close outside the range or key level.
  • Rising volume or volatility confirming participation.
  • Alignment with higher timeframe trend.
  • Room to move toward the next structural level.
natomy of a valid breakout

The pullbacks: market confirmation

A pullback happens when price returns to retest the broken level before continuing.
In bullish cases, the old resistance becomes new support; in bearish cases, the old support turns into new resistance.
A healthy pullback:

  • Touches the level without breaking it.
  • Forms a rejection candle or confirmation wick.
  • Resumes in the original breakout direction.
The pullback: market confirmation

Fakeouts

Fakeouts happen when price breaks a key level briefly and then snaps back inside the range, trapping traders who entered early.
They often occur around stop clusters, where liquidity is concentrated.
Typical warning signs:

  • Long wick through the level, but close back inside.
  • Weak or inconsistent volume.
  • Breaks against the higher timeframe trend.
Fakeouts

High-probability zones

The best breakouts appear under confluence:

  • When technical levels align with London or New York session opens.
  • When multiple timeframes agree on direction.
  • When there’s a macro catalyst supporting the move.
High-probability zones

Trade management

Breakouts demand precise management:

  • Entry: wait for candle close or retest.
  • Stop Loss: beyond the broken level.
  • Take Profit: equal to the size of the previous range or next level.
  • Active management: move to break-even as price advances; scale out partial profits.
Trade management

Common mistakes and checklist

Common mistakes:

  • Entering impulsively (FOMO).
  • Ignoring higher timeframe structure.
  • Placing stops too tight.
  • Misreading wicks or false volume spikes.

Checklist before entering a breakout:

  1. Did the candle close outside the range?
  2. Is momentum or volume confirming?
  3. Is the breakout aligned with the dominant trend?
  4. Is there enough room to the next target?
  5. Does your risk/reward exceed 1:2?
Common mistakes and checklist

Did that make sense? Let’s put it to the test.

Breakouts, Pullbacks and Fakeouts

tail spin

1 / 5

After a confirmed bullish breakout, the old resistance becomes:

2 / 5

To avoid getting caught in fakeouts, a trader should:

3 / 5

A fakeout occurs when…

4 / 5

A healthy pullback usually includes:

5 / 5

Which of the following best confirms a valid breakout?

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