Support and Resistance Basics
Support and Resistance are two of the most important concepts in technical analysis. They help traders identify potential areas where prices may stop, reverse, or break through.
What Is Support?
Support is a price level where buying interest is strong enough to prevent the price from falling further.
At support:
- 🟢 Buyers become more active.
- 📉 Selling pressure weakens.
- 🔄 The price often bounces upward.
Think of support as a floor beneath the price.
Example
If a stock repeatedly falls to ₹950 and then moves higher, ₹950 is acting as a support level.
What Is Resistance?
Resistance is a price level where selling pressure is strong enough to prevent the price from rising further.
At resistance:
- 🔴 Sellers become more active.
- 📈 Buying pressure weakens.
- 🔄 The price often reverses downward.
Think of resistance as a ceiling above the price.
Example
If a stock repeatedly rises to ₹1,100 but fails to move higher, ₹1,100 is acting as a resistance level.
Support and Resistance in Action
- Price above support: Buyers are defending the trend.
- Price below support: The support may become a new resistance.
- Price below resistance: Sellers are controlling the market.
- Price above resistance: The resistance may become a new support.
Breakouts and Breakdowns
📈 Breakout
A breakout occurs when the price moves above resistance with strong volume.
This may indicate:
- Strong buying momentum.
- The start of a new uptrend.
📉 Breakdown
A breakdown occurs when the price falls below support with strong volume.
This may indicate:
- Strong selling pressure.
- The start of a new downtrend.
How to Identify Support and Resistance
- Look for previous swing highs and swing lows.
- Identify areas where the price has reversed multiple times.
- Use trendlines to find dynamic support and resistance.
- Combine with moving averages (20 EMA, 50 EMA, 200 EMA).
- Use volume to confirm breakouts and breakdowns.
Trading Tips
- Wait for confirmation before entering a trade.
- A breakout with high volume is generally more reliable than one with low volume.
- Use candlestick patterns such as Hammer, Doji, or Engulfing candles near key levels for additional confirmation.
- Place a stop-loss below support for long trades or above resistance for short trades to help manage risk.
Example
A stock trades between ₹500 and ₹550 for several weeks.
- Support: ₹500
- Resistance: ₹550
If the stock breaks above ₹550 with strong volume, traders may view it as a bullish breakout. If it falls below ₹500, it may signal a bearish breakdown.
Key Takeaway
Support and resistance levels help traders identify potential entry points, exit points, and trend reversals. While these levels are powerful tools, they are not guaranteed turning points. Combining them with price action, volume, RSI, and EMA can improve the quality of trading decisions.
