Chart formations will fail. And while it can be easy to walk away from a scenario with an imperfect success rate while saying it ‘doesn’t work,’ the fact of the matter is formations are not designed to be perfect. They’re help for traders to incorporate with an overall approach that’s also addressing risk and money management, and that’s what can start to make trading with formations more attractive: The ability to impart strategy.

As we discuss in Traits of a Successful Trader, a trader’s risk management is going to have a big impact on their bottom line, regardless of how great their analysis might be.

The entire realm of technical analysis is based on the past. And we should all know that the past does not predict the future. But while history may not repeat, it can often rhyme, and this is where formations can come in, helping the trader to see a market in a way that they might not otherwise have seen it, and this can allow for the trader to implement an ‘if-then’ statement that could open the door to larger risk-reward ratios.

US DOLLAR BUILDS INTO ASCENDING TRIANGLE

Sometimes the formation will match the backdrop really well and it appears as though that’s what we have in the US Dollar currently. Last week saw the FOMC warn that rate hikes may be appearing faster than expected, with a possible hike on the horizon for next year. The bank also said that they may be nearing an announcement of tapering asset purchases, similarly, a factor that’s largely considered to be USD positive.

Add on to this that there are very few economies outside of the US looking at tighter policy options and this can further expose the USD to the potential for strength.

Last week’s announcement from the Fed sent the US Dollar back up to a key level of resistance, at 93.43, which was the same swing-high that set the top in Q1. That price held buyers at bay and late last week saw a support test; but already this week buyers have pushed the Greenback to that 93.43 level and price action is threatening a breakout.

US DOLLAR LONGER-TERM BREAKOUT POTENTIAL

Taking a further step back on the chart illustrates the formation well.

The US Dollar has so far spent the bulk of this year mean reverting, and if we take into account the bruising sell-off in the back nine months of 2020 trade, that makes sense. But now that we’re heading into Q4 and the Fed has made this shift, warning of a potential rate hike next year, the backdrop may be setting up for some bigger-picture strength.

From the below chart we can see this year’s dynamics at-play in the US Dollar, with resistance set in Q1 still helping to hold the highs today. That resistance was breached temporarily in August, with the 2021 high coming in at 93.73 and this creates a zone of resistance that remains in-play today.

On the support side of the equation, it’s the area around the 90 psychological level that helped to set the low shortly after the New Year open and then again in May/June. A higher-low in September, right around the Fibonacci level at 91.93, helps to make the bullish trendline that defines the other side of the formation.