Imagine a spring being compressed. The longer it is held down — the more energy builds up. When released — it explodes.
Markets work the same way.
Price consolidates in a tight range for days or weeks. Energy builds. Buyers and sellers reach a temporary standoff.
Then one side wins. Price breaks out of the range with force — and a new move begins.
Breakout traders are positioned and ready for exactly that moment.
Breakout trading means entering a trade at the moment price moves decisively beyond a key level — anticipating that the momentum will continue in the breakout direction.
The logic is simple. A level that has contained price for a long time represents a significant barrier. When that barrier finally breaks — the resulting move is often powerful and sustained.
Not every move beyond a level is a real breakout. Many are false — price pokes above resistance briefly then falls back. These are called fakeouts and they trap breakout traders on the wrong side.
A valid breakout has these characteristics:
Strong momentum candle.
The breakout candle should be large with a strong close near its high.
A weak, small candle breaking a level is suspicious — it lacks conviction.
Increased volume.
Real breakouts are accompanied by rising volume.
Price breaking resistance on falling volume is a major warning sign of a fakeout.
Clean level being broken.
The stronger and more tested the level — the more significant the breakout.
A level touched five times over three months breaking is far more meaningful than a level touched twice in a week.
Higher timeframe alignment.
A breakout on the 1-hour chart in the direction of the daily trend is far more reliable than a breakout against the trend.
Always check the higher timeframe before entering a breakout trade.
Method 1 — Enter on the breakout candle close.
Wait for the breakout candle to fully close above resistance.
Enter at the open of the next candle.
This avoids being caught in a wick that briefly breaks the level then reverses.
Method 2 — Enter on the retest.
After breaking out — price often pulls back to test the broken level as new support.
Wait for this retest. Enter when price holds above the broken level with a bullish confirmation candle.
This gives a better entry price and lower risk — but sometimes price does not retest and the move is missed.
Stop loss:
For breakout entries — place stop below the broken level.
If the breakout is real — the broken resistance should now act as support.
Price returning below the level suggests the breakout has failed.
Target:
Use the measured move technique.
Measure the height of the consolidation range before the breakout.
Project that distance upward from the breakout point.
This gives a realistic target based on the energy built up during consolidation.
The biggest challenge in breakout trading is false breakouts.
Price breaks above resistance. You enter. Price immediately reverses and falls back into the range. Your stop is hit.
This is a fakeout — and it happens frequently, especially in crypto where manipulation is more common than in traditional markets.
How to reduce fakeouts:
In the next topic we will study the support and resistance bounce strategy — one of the most reliable setups available to any trader.