
Trading Range
A trading range occurs when a security trades between consistent high and low prices for a period of time. The top of a security’s trading range often provides price resistance, while the bottom of the trading range typically offers price support. A breakout occurs when the price of a security breaks above a trading range, while a breakdown happens when the price falls below a trading range. A trading range is characterized by both a support price and a resistance price, between which the price tends to fluctuate. Since price volatility is seen as equivalent to risk, a security’s trading range is a good indicator of relative riskiness. A conservative investor prefers securities with smaller price fluctuations compared to securities that are susceptible to significant gyrations.

What Is a Trading Range?
A trading range occurs when a security trades between consistent high and low prices for a period of time. The top of a security’s trading range often provides price resistance, while the bottom of the trading range typically offers price support.




Understanding Trading Ranges
When a stock breaks through or falls below its trading range, it usually means there is momentum (positive or negative) building. A breakout occurs when the price of a security breaks above a trading range, while a breakdown happens when the price falls below a trading range. Typically, breakouts and breakdowns are more reliable when they are accompanied by a large volume, which suggests widespread participation by traders and investors.
Many investors look at the duration of a trading range. Large trending moves often follow extended range-bound periods. Day traders frequently use the trading range of the first half-hour of the trading session as a reference point for their intraday strategies. For example, a trader might buy a stock if it breaks above its opening trading range.
Trading Range.
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Ranges and Volatility
Since price volatility is seen as equivalent to risk, a security’s trading range is a good indicator of relative riskiness.
A conservative investor prefers securities with smaller price fluctuations compared to securities that are susceptible to significant gyrations. Such an investor may prefer to invest in more stable sectors such as utilities, healthcare, and telecommunications, rather than in more cyclical (or high-beta) sectors such as financials, technology, and commodities. Generally speaking, high-beta sectors may have wider ranges than low-beta sectors.
Trading Range Strategies
Range-bound trading is a trading strategy that seeks to identify and capitalize on stocks trading in price channels. After finding major support and resistance levels and connecting them with horizontal trendlines, a trader can buy a security at the lower trendline support (bottom of the channel) and sell it at the upper trendline resistance (top of the channel).
Support and Resistance
If a security is in a well-established trading range, traders can buy when the price approaches its support and sell when it reaches the level of resistance. Technical indicators, such as the relative strength index (RSI), stochastic oscillator, and the commodity channel index (CCI), can be used to confirm overbought and oversold conditions when price oscillates within a trading range.
For example, a trader could enter a long position when the price of a stock is trading at support, and the RSI gives an oversold reading below 30. Alternatively, the trader may decide to open a short position when the RSI moves into overbought territory above 70. A stop-loss order should be placed just outside of the trading range to minimize risk.
Breakouts and Breakdowns
Traders can enter in the direction of a breakout or breakdown from a trading range. To confirm the move is valid, traders should use other indicators, such as volume and price action.
For instance, there should be a significant increase in volume on the initial breakout or breakdown as well as several closes outside the trading range. Instead of chasing the price, traders may want to wait for a retracement before entering a trade. For example, a buy limit order could be placed just above the top of the trading range, which now acts as a support level. A stop-loss order could sit at the opposite side of the trading range to protect against a failed breakout.
Example of a Trading Range
Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021
In this chart, a trader might have noticed that the stock was starting to form a price channel in late November and early December.
After the initial peaks were formed, the trader may have started placing long and short trades based on these trendlines, with a total of three short trades and two long trades along the resistance and support levels, respectively. The stock does not yet indicate a breakout from either trendline, which would mark an end to the range-bound trading strategy.
Related terms:
Ascending Channel
An ascending channel is the price action contained between upward sloping parallel lines. Higher highs and higher lows characterize this pattern. read more
Breakout and Example
A breakout is the movement of the price of an asset through an identified level of support or resistance. Breakouts are used by some traders to signal a buying or selling opportunity. read more
Channel
A channel may refer to a distribution system for businesses or a trading range between support and resistance on a price chart. read more
Day Trader
Day traders execute short and long trades to capitalize on intraday market price action, which result from temporary supply and demand inefficiencies. read more
Intraday
In the financial world, the term intraday is shorthand used to describe securities that trade on the markets during regular business hours and their highs and lows throughout the day. Day traders closely watch these moves, hoping to score quick profits. read more
Long Position
A long position conveys bullish intent as an investor will purchase the security with the hope that it will increase in value. read more
Momentum
Momentum is the rate of acceleration of a security's price or volume. Momentum generally refers to the speed of movement and is usually defined as a rate. read more
Opening Range
The opening range shows a security's high and low price for a given period after the market opens. read more
Peak
A peak refers to the pinnacle point of economic growth in a business cycle before the market enters into a period of contraction. read more
Price Action and Explanation
Price action is the movement of a security's price over time, which forms the basis for a securities price chart and makes technical analysis possible. read more