
Exhaustion
Exhaustion is a situation in which a majority of participants trading in the same asset are either long or short, leaving few investors to take the other side of the transaction when participants wish to close their positions. Exhaustion can potentially be identified by looking at the number of participants who are long or short, watching for blow-off tops, or looking for reversals based on swing highs and lows. Exhaustion implies a state or condition that is difficult to fight, and surrender to the inevitable is imminent. When sellers started to become more aggressive, there were not enough buyers to support the price, even as the price got cheaper and cheaper. Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021 The price then drops below the trendline and also made a lower swing low, followed by a lower swing high. But, eventually, the sellers overwhelm the buyers, the buyers turn into sellers, and the price falls dramatically.

What Is Exhaustion?
Exhaustion is a situation in which a majority of participants trading in the same asset are either long or short, leaving few investors to take the other side of the transaction when participants wish to close their positions. For example, if everyone has already bought, when those people want to sell, there will be no more buyers to sell. This will cause the price to fall.
Exhaustion often signals the reversal of a current trend because it illustrates excess levels of supply or demand, indicating a market is either overbought or oversold.



Understanding Exhaustion
Exhaustion implies a state or condition that is difficult to fight, and surrender to the inevitable is imminent. The same goes for exhaustion in the financial markets, which is based on auctions.
At an auction, there are bidders and sellers. The former are bidding on an asset or security to buy, and the latter is offering a price for buyers. When there are more aggressive buyers than sellers, the price goes up. Likewise, when there are more aggressive sellers, the price goes down.
A trend is exhausted when the price of the asset or security has moved too far in one direction. This may occur when the number of buyers in the auction dwindles and sellers start to take over. Exhaustion is reached when the asset or security does not have the support from buyers or sellers to continue moving either up or down.
When exhaustion happens, traders can expect a trend reversal.
Identifying Exhaustion
Traders can identify periods of exhaustion by looking at the Commitments of Traders Report. This report is published every week and shows position levels in the futures markets. An excessively high number of long contracts could indicate that everybody who wishes to be long has already taken a position, leaving few investors to keep buying the asset at current prices (let alone higher prices). If there is likely no one left to buy, then sellers will start becoming more aggressive to get out of long positions or get short.
Blow-off tops are an extreme example of exhaustion. The price has been rising aggressively on increasing volume. But, eventually, the sellers overwhelm the buyers, the buyers turn into sellers, and the price falls dramatically.
Exhaustion on a small scale occurs on every price wave. The price moves up or down — and then has a pullback. It occurs on one-minute charts with small trend reversals and pullbacks, and it occurs on longer-term weekly and monthly charts in regards to large trends.
Technical traders view uptrends as a series of rising swing lows and swing highs. Lower swing lows and lower swing highs indicate the uptrend could be in trouble and a reversal may be underway. A downtrend is a series of lower swing lows and lower swing highs. Higher swing lows and higher swing highs could indicate a reversal to the upside.
Example of Exhaustion In a Rising Stock
The following chart shows that Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) was in a prolonged uptrend before the stock was exhausted and reversed to a significant degree.
During the rise, the price was making overall higher highs and higher lows and, in this case, respecting a rising trendline.
Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021
The price then drops below the trendline and also made a lower swing low, followed by a lower swing high. The reversal has started and the price continues to drop as sellers overwhelm any buyers that are remaining.
Volume dropped through much of the rise, showing that there was less and less interest at the higher and higher prices. This was a warning sign of upcoming exhaustion; typically, volume help confirm price moves — rising prices are accompanied by rising volume on the moves up.
Excessive volume can also indicate an impending reversal because the massive volume spike typically means everyone who wanted to buy was able to buy. This scenario is more common in blow-off tops. The Nvidia case was not a blow-off top, rather it was a steady uptrend that progressively had less interest. When sellers started to become more aggressive, there were not enough buyers to support the price, even as the price got cheaper and cheaper.
Related terms:
Blow-Off Top
A blow-off top is a chart pattern showing a steep and rapid increase in price and trading volume, followed by a similarly steep and rapid drop. read more
Choppy Market
A choppy market refers to a market condition where prices swing up and down considerably, either in the short term, or for an extended period of time. read more
Close Position
Closing a position refers to a security transaction that is the opposite of an open position, thereby nullifying it and eliminating the initial exposure. read more
Commitments of Traders Report (COT)
The Commitments of Traders or COT report is a weekly report showing the positions of futures market participants. Learn how to use the COT report. read more
Downtrend
A downtrend refers to the price action of a security that moves lower in price as it fluctuates over time. read more
Exhausted Selling Model
The exhausted selling model is used to estimate when a period of declining prices for a security has ended and higher prices may be forthcoming. read more
Financial Markets
Financial markets refer broadly to any marketplace where the trading of securities occurs, including the stock market and bond markets, among others. read more
Overbought
Overbought refers to a security that traders believe is priced above its true value and that will likely face corrective downward pressure in the near future. read more
Oversold and Example
Oversold is a term used to describe when an asset is being aggressively sold, and in some cases may have dropped too far. Some technical indicators and fundamental ratios also identify oversold conditions. read more