In a part of the financial market charts, there is a space between the candlesticks where no trading activity has taken place, and it is created for various reasons. The distance between the previous candlestick's closing price and the opening of the next candle is called a Price Gap. Further, we will discuss the definition of Gap and using it in trading.
Contents
A gap refers to an area of the chart where no trading activity has taken place. It occurs when the price of an asset or currency pair goes down or up sharply, and there is nothing in between, meaning that the market has opened at a different price than its previous candlesticks closing. It means that when a candlestick closes at a specific price and a new candle opens at another price much higher or lower than the last one, a price gap is created.
Gaps are created for fundamental and technical reasons. For example, if a company's earnings report is much higher than expected, the company's stock may have a gap the next day. It means the stock price opened higher than the previous day's closing, thus creating a Gap. Other news, such as significant economic calendar news and reports, major political news, tension or war between countries, etc., can lead to a price gap.
In the forex market, a gap is created for two reasons. The first is because the forex market is closed on Saturday and Sunday. In these two days, events, such as political or economic news, tension, and war between countries can cause a price gap in forex symbols. For example, on March 12, 2023, the US banks' bankruptcy news on Saturday and Sunday caused the dollar to weaken. And symbols related to the dollar, such as the EURUSD, USDJPY, XAUUSD, etc., opened on Monday with a severe price gap compared to Friday. Therefore, the first reason for the price gap in Forex is the fundamental and technical news on Saturday and Sunday.
The second reason is the economic calendar's important news release. In the forex market, significant economic news such as the interest rate, inflation, or the US NFP, etc., may be published at a specific time, very weak or very strong, contrary to expectations, at such times, because the trading volume reaches its peak in a fraction of a second and it causes strong supply or demand on one side, resulting in a price gap in related symbols. Imagine that the US Central Bank's interest rate news is published at 01:30 pm, and contrary to expectations, this bank increases its interest rate, and as a result, the value of the US dollar rises. At such a moment, in the symbols related to the dollar, considering that there is a strong demand for the US dollar purchase in the symbols EURUSD, USDJPY, XAUUSD, etc., in the candles opened after the news release compared to the candles before the news release, you might see the price gap. .
A bullish gap occurs when the candle's opening price is higher than the closing price of the previous candle.
A bearish gap occurs when the candle's opening price is lower than the closing price of the previous candle.
The price gap is common in the stock market because trades usually only occur between designated market hours, depending on the stock trades that are done. For example, stocks of US companies such as APPLE are open only between 02:30 and 09 pm. Due to the daily holiday in the first picture, there were several gaps in APPLE shares.
Even if trades are done outside these hours, the charts will not be updated. So there is a gap between 02:29 and 09:01 pm. During this time, buying and selling prices may change, and it is reflected in the next day's opening price.
Although the forex markets are open 24 hours a day, they are closed on weekends, Saturdays, and Sundays. However, the forex market is closed to retail traders only. Large banks and investment funds may still trade over the weekend, which creates gaps. Gaps occur based on fundamental news when markets are closed to retail traders, but may also be based on technical factors like failures. Therefore, although there is usually no price gap in the forex market on weekdays other than when major economic calendar news is released, it is common on weekends.
Generally, all markets with fixed market hours are often subject to a price gap between trading and non-trading hours.
Common Gap
A common gap usually occurs without any significant event, and they are very common, as the name suggests. It mostly happens during holidays , like Saturday and Sunday forex holidays, or one-hour daily holidays for gold, oil, and the stock market index, etc. Because the amount of this type of gap is small, it usually fills up quickly.
Common gaps are usually what market technicalists refer to as filled gaps. It refers to when the price returns to where the gap was created. For example, if APPLE stock closes at $158.00 on Monday, and then APPLE opens the next day at $158.30, Tuesday's price will tend to reach the $158 price level.
Breakaway Gap
A breakaway gap is a term used in technical analysis that identifies strong price movement when it meets support or resistance levels. Price crosses the support or resistance through a Gap. Breakaway gaps are often seen early in a trend when the price breaks out of the range. This type of gap can also occur with the breakdown of other technical pattern types such as triangles, wedges, cups, and handles, or head and shoulders patterns.
A breakaway gap with higher than average volume indicates a strong trend in the direction of the Gap. Increasing volume in this type of gap helps confirm that price action is likely to continue in the breakaway direction. If the volume in the breakaway gap is low, the probability of a fake breakaway is higher. A fake breakaway occurs when the price gap is above the resistance or below the support level, but the price fails to sustain and returns to the previous trading range.
Exhaustion Gap
When there is a good upward or downward trend and a price gap is created in the previous trend's direction, but there is no significant increase in trading volume, it is a sign of an Exhaustion Gap. The exhaustion gap shows that the current trend has reached its peak and can no longer continue, and market traders are changing the trend. The exhaustion gap is one of the best types of Gap for traders because it warns traders of a trend end and change.
The principle of the Exhaustion Gap is that in a current trend, e.g., an uptrend, the number of likely buyers reduces, and sellers aggressively enter the market. Buyers may be largely exhausted, which means that the uptrend is likely to stop as buyers have benefited from the previous long rally in the stock price and are ready to exit the market, i.e., sell.
Runaway Gap
Generally, a gap in the price of an asset occurs when the price increases significantly in an upward or downward direction. A runaway gap is one of several gaps that may occur during a process. This type of gap, best seen on a price chart, occurs during strong bullish or bearish moves and is portrayed by a significant price change in the dominant trend's direction.
During a trend, the price of an asset may experience several gaps that can help strengthen the direction of the trend. Market technicalists have theorized that Runaway Gaps often occur after experiencing a breakaway gap because the possibility of an unexpected event, such as news, can reinforce an existing trend.
The psychology behind runaway gaps is that traders who didn't enter on the initial move, get tired of waiting for a correction and enter the market. This sudden buying or selling interest occurs in a flash, usually precipitated by unexpected news, which forces the market maker to place orders at price points further away from the last traded price before the gap formed. Traders' eagerness to interact, sometimes accompanied by panic, leads them to trade at these price levels, causing the asset price to jump up or down, leading to the Runaway Gap appearance.
Uptrends and downtrends usually follow trading cycles that usually include breakaway, runaway, and exhaustion gaps. A breakaway gap usually occurs to support a trend reversal signal. It may be accompanied by a resistance pattern at the top or a support pattern at the bottom. As an asset's uptrend or downtrend begins, the market setting prepares for multiple runaway gaps. Runaway Gaps are usually accompanied by high trading volume, which supports investor confidence in the trend direction. Runaway gaps can be added as evidence that the current trend is sustainable. And finally, exhaustion gaps occur near the bottom of the price pattern and are a sign of a final attempt to reach a price ceiling or floor.
When someone says that the gap is filled, it means the price has returned to the initial level before the Gap. These fillings are very common and occur due to the reasons below:
When the gaps are filled on the same day as the trades on which they occur, it is known as fading. For example, a company announces high earnings per share for the coming quarter, and the news pushes the stock price higher (meaning the price opens significantly higher than its previous candle's closing). Now suppose, during the day, people realize that the announcement shows some weakness, so they start selling. Finally, the price reaches yesterday's close, and the gap fills.
There are many ways to use gaps, with some strategies more popular than others. Some traders trade when fundamental or technical factors are strong in the gaps' favor or loss on the next trading day. For example, due to the war between Russia and Ukraine, there was a strong demand for gold as a safe asset, and gold opened on the forex market with a strong positive gap. Traders consider the published news strong and decide to trade after a suitable situation in the bullish gap direction.
After establishing a high or low point (often through other technical analysis forms), some traders fade the gaps in the opposite direction. For example, if a stock has a gap based on some speculative reports, experienced traders may close the gap by opening a sell trade for that stock. Finally, traders may buy when the price level reaches the previous support after the gap fills.
Here are the key points to remember when trading with Gap:
Be sure to consider the volume. High volume should occur in breakaway gaps, while low volume should occur in exhaustion gaps.
Below is an example of this strategy.
Trading gaps are a matter of choice. While some traders swear by trading gaps, other traders avoid doing so. Some traders have found that depending on the particular currency pair, the gaps are often filled. So these traders feel comfortable trading the gap. On the other hand, other traders believe that the gaps are not always filled and are usually less filled. These traders avoid trading gaps. If you pick the right currency pair or stock index, and if those markets tend to fill gaps, it may be profitable to trade gaps. If you want to trade gaps, there are a few things to keep in mind. Further, we will review a trade based on the gap.
For example, in the picture below, there is a gold gap, which occurred on Saturday and Sunday holidays and was due to the US banks' bankruptcy news. Firstly, from the fundamentals and news point of view, the reason for the gap is strong, and the price of gold will likely grow in the gap direction.
Secondly, the created gap was because it occurred in the middle of an upward trend, and after breaking the resistance of $1,850, it is a runaway gap type. Due to the two reasons mentioned, you can look for a buy position in the gold symbol after the occurrence of this gap.
As you can see in the picture, gold closed at the 1867 number and opened with a gap at the 1884 number, and after an upward swing, it penetrated the Gap. A trader can look for a buy position with a stop below the pre-gap candle when the price penetrates 50% to 70% of the gap created.
As it was said, when there is a gap, there is a space in the chart between the previous and the next candle, as a result, there is no price and no trade. Therefore, if the conditional trades and the stop loss or take profit is in the gap area, these transactions are activated at the price where the new candlestick starts to form a candlestick.
For example, suppose that on Friday, a few hours before the end of the market, a trader buys 0.1 lot in the gold symbol at the price of 1920 and sets the stop loss for this transaction at 1910, then the gold symbol closes at 10 pm on Friday with a price of 1914. Then, after Saturday and Sunday holidays, due to news reasons, the gold symbol will open on Sunday at 11 pm in the 1905 number. Therefore, instead of being activated in 1910, the trader's trade stop loss will be activated in 1905 at a higher loss due to the descending gap. This issue is due to slippage.
With this strategy type, some traders believe not using take profit and stop loss is better because the bottom and top of the charts naturally act as take profit and stop loss. However, other traders believe that stop-loss orders should always be used and set at essential resistance or support levels to avoid high losses. The choice of each trader is based on their risk assessment. However, in general, traders must place stop-loss orders on each trade.
In another example, imagine that before closing the forex market, a trader places a conditional buy-limit transaction in the number 1910, and the market closes at 1914 as in the previous example, and when the market opens, the buy transaction is active in the number 1905 instead of 1910.
پست مرتبط
پربازدیدترین ها
0