very good example bedsit.
From what I can see - you are allowing some 'wiggle' in your interpretation of the fibs. You aren't waiting for a bounce off the exact level.
I can also see that the price made swings that were not off fib levels.
So - whilst I understand people will look at this & say it proves fib levels are significant, I will ask the following:
1 - How much leeway are you giving around the fibs ? You obviously have zones around the fibs, not just a direct hit.
2 - Given this leeway - how much 'coverage' do your fib levels have - what is the total area covered across all fib levels where a swing in that zone is considered a hit ?
3 - What is the ratio of covered to uncovered areas ?
4 - What is the actual probability of a price swing being in one of these area (uncovered vs covered) ?
5 - How many swing highs/lows are there in your chart ?
6 - How many swing highs/lows are in a fib zone?
7 - How do these proportions compart to actual coverage of fib zones ?
The eyeball fails us when we are expecting to see something. When I look at the picture, I do not see the significance others see. Probably because I am argumentative.
Hi DT.
Sorry - I didn't put any explanation with the attachment.
I use Fibonacci levels on different time frames in different ways. I used this example to get an idea about the target - (the circles only show how the price behaved around different levels).
I prefer to pay more attention to the practical side, rather than to Fibonacci levels' discussions i.e. if one makes regular profit from them, why not.