Retracement

Retracement

A retracement is a technical term used to identify a minor pullback or change in the direction of a financial instrument, such as a stock or index. The term, used by technical analysts to analyze the price of securities, refers to a short-term change in a stock's price relative to an overarching trend. ![Image](data:image/gif;charset=utf-8;base64,R0lGODlhCwAGAPMAAEVFR0pKTDClnOLh5uTj6OTj6eXk6ebl6ujo6uno7evq7+zr8O3s8fDw8vHx80VFRywAAAAACwAGAEMINgAbNFDQAIFABw0YBEiQgECCAQwZHkggkKDBBggZNGBoIEEBhgISHCA4sODBhAAqmhTYYEGDgAA7) Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021 Again, it is important to remember that a retracement is a minor or short-term pullback in the price of a stock or index. A retracement is a technical term used to identify a minor pullback or change in the direction of a financial instrument, such as a stock or index. Should the price fall below or rise above support or resistance, or violate an uptrend or downtrend, then it is no longer considered a retracement but a reversal.

A retracement is a minor pullback or change in the direction of a financial instrument, such as a stock or index.

What Is a Retracement?

A retracement is a technical term used to identify a minor pullback or change in the direction of a financial instrument, such as a stock or index. Retracements are temporary in nature and do not indicate a shift in the larger trend.

A retracement is a minor pullback or change in the direction of a financial instrument, such as a stock or index.

Understanding a Retracement

A retracement refers to the temporary reversal of an overarching trend in a stock's price. Distinct from a reversal, retracements are short-term periods of movement against a trend, followed by a return to the previous trend.

The chart below illustrates the share price of General Electric Co. It is showing that the stock is in a downtrend. However, there are points on the chart that indicate that the price is rising, which would be considered a retracement.

Image

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021

A retracement by itself does not say much. However, when combined with other technical indicators it can help a trader identify if the current trend is likely to continue or if a significant reversal is taking hold.

A retracement should be used with other technical indicators and never alone. If not used correctly, it could cause the analysis to be misguided.

Retracement vs. Reversal

It is essential to determine the difference between a reversal and a short-term retracement. A retracement is not easy to identify because it can easily be mistaken for a reversal. Even worse is if a reversal is mistaken for a retracement.

The chart below shows the S&P 500 during 2018 when a significant uptrend took place between April and October. There are three retracements identified on the chart, although there were a series of smaller ones as well, as the S&P 500 was rising to record highs.

What is most important is that the retracements never breached the uptrend. However, in October what appeared to be a retracement became a reversal after the index did finally fall below the uptrend, leading to a sharp decline.

Image

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021

Again, it is important to remember that a retracement is a minor or short-term pullback in the price of a stock or index. What is key is that the stock does not breach a critical level of support or resistance nor breach the uptrend or downtrend. Should the price fall below or rise above support or resistance, or violate an uptrend or downtrend, then it is no longer considered a retracement but a reversal.

Related terms:

Downtrend

A downtrend refers to the price action of a security that moves lower in price as it fluctuates over time. read more

Fibonacci Channel

The Fibonacci channel is a variation of the Fibonacci retracement tool, with support and resistance lines run diagonally rather than horizontally. read more

Financial Instrument

A financial instrument is a real or virtual document representing a legal agreement involving any kind of monetary value. read more

Harami Cross and Example

A harami cross is a candlestick pattern that consists of a large candlestick followed by a doji. Sometimes it signals the start of a trend reversal. read more

Pullback and Example

A pullback refers to the falling back of a price of a stock or commodity from its recent pricing peak. read more

Resistance (Resistance Level) & Example

Resistance refers to a level that the price action of an asset has difficulty rising above over a specific period of time. read more

Reversal and Trading Uses

A reversal occurs when a security's price trend changes direction, and is used by technical traders to confirm patterns. read more

S&P 500 Index – Standard & Poor's 500 Index

The S&P 500 Index (the Standard & Poor's 500 Index) is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the 500 largest publicly traded companies in the U.S. read more

Support (Support Level) & Example

Support refers to a level that the price action of an asset has difficulty falling below over a specific period of time. read more

Technical Analysis of Stocks and Trends

Technical analysis of stocks and trends is the study of historical market data, including price and volume, to predict future market behavior. read more