A swing failure pattern (SFP) is a trend reversal indicator that can be used to discover a weakness in the current trend and identify early reversal signs.
What Is a Swing Failure Pattern (SFP)?
In an uptrend, there are repeated higher highs and higher lows but, at some point, the price fails to achieve a new high and, in a downtrend, prices fail to make a new low. This is a sign of a pattern shift.
The trendline must break through the previous high in a downtrend or the previous low in an uptrend for the pattern to be completed.
Traders utilize failure swings to plan their entry and exit. When a failure swing happens in an upswing, traders take a short position, and when a failure swing occurs in a downtrend, traders go long.
Experienced traders time their entrance to coincide with the creation of the second high before the failure swings in the downtrend.
A relative strength index separation occurs when the price and the indicator split from each other, signaling a lack of trend momentum.
The same thing happens when an RSI failure swing occurs, with verification of trend shift on a breach of the indicator’s fail point. To execute more verified trades, one might wait for a failed swing to appear on the charts.
When the price line and the RSI line separate from each other, this is referred to as a failure swing. It denotes a drop in prevailing strength, particularly when the market is overvalued or oversold.
In a bullish cycle, the market hits the highest possible level or the overbought limit before slipping down. It then gets up again but fails to climb above the previous high, causing the trendline to form an ‘M’ shape. This is the point at which the failure swing occurs. In the case of an uptrend, failure to hit a higher high indicates that the present uptrend is deteriorating. Similarly, in a bearish market, the reverse occurs. The second peak fails to hit the lowest low in the overselling region and climbs instead.