🎯Breakout or Pullback? The Difference in Risk and Entry Psychology
Breakout vs pullback: Two Entries into the Same Trade, Two Completely Different Psychologies
It's 3:47 PM, the stock has been sitting below resistance at 100 Kč all day, and suddenly — a candle breaks through to 102, volume spikes, and the chart looks like a rocket taking off. Two voices battle in your head. The first shouts, "Jump in now, don't let it get away!" The second whispers, "Wait, maybe it'll come back and you can buy cheaper." Both are right. And both can be wrong. This is the eternal battle of two entry styles: breakout (you go into strength) and pullback (you wait for a discount).
They are not opponents. They are two different tools for two different situations — and most beginners lose simply because they use a hammer where they need a screwdriver.
Breakout: Buying Confirmed Strength
A breakout means entering when the price breaks a significant level — such as a monthly high, the edge of consolidation, or resistance that the price has hit three times. The logic is simple: sellers who defended this level have been overpowered. Buyers have the upper hand, and the space "upwards" opens.
Picture in words: imagine a ceiling in a room. The price hits it again and again (resistance). At the moment of the breakthrough, the ceiling bursts, and above it, there is suddenly free space without resistance — because no one has traded there for a long time, there are no "stuck" sellers.
Specific Example of a Breakout
A model stock oscillates in the range of 95–100 Kč for 6 weeks. Resistance at 100 Kč holds the fourth test. Fifth attempt — the candle closes at 102.50 Kč, and the daily volume is about 60% higher than the average of the last 20 days. This is a typical breakout signal:
- Entry zone: just above the broken level (e.g., 101–102 Kč)
- Stop-alert: below the broken edge — for example, 98.50 Kč (if the price returns to the range, the breakout failed)
- Risk per share: ~3.50–4 Kč (difference between entry and stop-alert)
Pullback: Waiting for a Return to Support
A pullback is the opposite of patience. You let the price break through, shoot up — and then wait for it to "breathe" and return to the broken level, which has turned from resistance into support (known as a retest). Only then do you enter.
Picture in words: that burst ceiling board from the previous example has now become the floor. The price stands on it, checks that it holds — and bounces higher. You buy on this floor, not in the air.
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