In this
article we are going to work out the
best way to take maximum profits from
a position long or short. Many traders
know how to get into a position but
are often uncertain when they should
get out.
In our
last article we discussed
Fibonacci levels and how to use these levels for
entry and stop placement. So we have a
sensible place to enter the market and
a sensible place to put our stop loss
now we need a logical target.
Don't
worry if this sounds a little
complicated it isn't. From the last
lesson you may remember that we
calculated out retracement levels by
measuring the distance between point A
and point B. All we are going to do
now is add another measurement called
point C to get some fibonacci
expansion ratios

We will
eventually finish up with two targets.
T1 and T2. We shall discuss which one
to choose later. The formula for the
calculations would look like this.
T1 = .618(B-A)+C
T2 = B-A+C
Let's
assume an imaginary security called
ABC.PTY. Point A shall be 189, Point B
shall be 278 and point C shall be 245.
It's in an up trend and the first move
(A to B) is 89 (245-189). It then
pulls back to point C. The distance
between point B and point C is 33
(278-245). We can now calculate some
numbers.
T1 = .618(278-189)+245 Target is 300
T2 = 278-189+245 Target is 334
The
chart below is a 5-minute chart of the
US dollar/ Canadian dollar (USD/CAD)
as you can see A is 1.4900, B is
1.4837 and C is 1.4863. Therefore:
T1 = .618(1.4837-1.4900)+1.4863 Target
is 1.4824
T2 = 1.4837-1.4900+1.4863 Target is
1.4800

In our
next chart we have the 4 hour chart of
the British Pound/ US dollar (GBP/USD)
as you can see A is 1.5712, B is
1.5859 and C is 1.5782. Therefore:
T1 = .618(1.5859-1.5712)+1.5782 Target
is 1.5873
T2 = 1.5859-1.5712+1.5782 Target is
1.5929