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Support & Resistance

The invisible walls that control price movement. Master S&R levels to know where price is likely to bounce, break, or reverse.

What Are Support & Resistance Levels?

Support and Resistance are the most fundamental concepts in technical analysis. They represent price levels where buying pressure (support) or selling pressure (resistance) is strong enough to halt or reverse a price move. Every professional trader, whether trading Nifty futures, Bank Nifty options, or individual stocks on NSE, uses S&R levels as the foundation of their analysis.

Support is a price level where demand is strong enough to prevent the price from declining further. Think of it as a floor. When Nifty approaches a support level, buyers step in because they perceive the price as attractive, creating a bounce. The more times a level is tested without breaking, the stronger it becomes.

Resistance is a price level where selling pressure is strong enough to prevent the price from rising further. Think of it as a ceiling. When Nifty approaches resistance, sellers enter the market because they perceive the price as overvalued, or traders with prior losses want to exit at breakeven.

S&R levels work because of collective market psychology. Thousands of traders remember key price levels. When price revisits these levels, the same emotional responses (fear, greed, regret) trigger similar buying or selling decisions, making these levels self-fulfilling to a degree.

Types of S&R Levels

Horizontal S&R

Drawn from historical price turning points. If Nifty bounced from 23,800 three times in the past month, that level becomes strong horizontal support. These are the most reliable and commonly used S&R levels.

Trendline S&R (Diagonal)

Drawn by connecting successive higher lows (uptrend support) or lower highs (downtrend resistance). A rising trendline connecting Nifty's swing lows acts as dynamic diagonal support.

Dynamic S&R (Moving Averages)

Moving averages like 20 EMA, 50 EMA, and 200 SMA act as dynamic support/resistance. Nifty frequently bounces off the 200-day SMA in bull markets, making it a watched level by institutional traders.

Psychological Levels

Round numbers like Nifty 24,000, 25,000, or Bank Nifty 50,000 act as strong S&R. Humans gravitate toward round numbers for placing orders, stop-losses, and targets, creating natural S&R zones.

Previous Day High/Low (PDH/PDL)

The previous trading day's high and low are key intraday S&R levels. Many intraday traders on NSE use PDH and PDL as the first reference points. A break above PDH signals strength; a break below PDL signals weakness.

Pivot Points

Calculated from previous day's high, low, and close: Pivot = (H + L + C) / 3. S1, S2, R1, R2 are derived from this. Widely used by intraday Nifty and Bank Nifty traders for objective S&R levels.

Pivot Point Formulas

Pivot (P) = (High + Low + Close) / 3
R1 = (2 × P) - Low   |   S1 = (2 × P) - High
R2 = P + (High - Low)   |   S2 = P - (High - Low)

P = Central Pivot Point (most important level)

R1, R2 = First and second resistance levels

S1, S2 = First and second support levels

High, Low, Close = Previous day's values

Role Reversal Principle

One of the most powerful S&R concepts is role reversal: when a support level breaks, it becomes the new resistance, and when a resistance level breaks, it becomes the new support. This happens because traders who bought at support and suffered losses when it broke now want to exit at breakeven, creating selling pressure (new resistance) at the old support level.

Nifty Role Reversal Example

Nifty had strong support at 24,000 for several weeks. Multiple bounces confirmed this level. Then, due to global selling pressure, Nifty broke below 24,000 and fell to 23,700.

When Nifty recovered to 24,000 again, this former support acted as resistance. Traders who were trapped with losses from the breakdown sold their positions at 24,000, causing the rally to stall.

This role reversal concept works across all timeframes and is used by swing traders, positional traders, and even scalpers on 5-minute charts of Bank Nifty.

How to Draw S&R on Charts

Support & Resistance Zones Resistance (24,800) Support (24,200) Bounce Rejection Time

Price bounces off support zones and gets rejected at resistance zones. The more touches, the stronger the level.

  1. Identify swing highs and lows: Look at the chart and mark price points where significant reversals occurred. On a daily Nifty chart, look for clear turning points.
  2. Look for clusters, not exact prices: S&R are zones, not exact lines. If Nifty reversed at 24,180, 24,210, and 24,195 on different occasions, the S&R zone is approximately 24,180-24,210.
  3. Use multiple timeframes: A support level visible on the weekly chart is stronger than one only visible on the 15-minute chart. Start with higher timeframes and zoom in.
  4. Count the touches: The more times a level has been tested (bounced off), the stronger it is. Three or more touches confirm a strong S&R level.
  5. Consider volume: S&R levels with high volume at the turning points are more significant. Volume confirms that many traders participated in the reversal.

Trading S&R Levels

Bounce Trades (Reversal)

  • Buy near support when price shows rejection (long lower wicks, bullish engulfing)
  • Sell/short near resistance when price shows rejection (long upper wicks, bearish engulfing)
  • Stop-loss just below support (for longs) or above resistance (for shorts)
  • Target the opposite S&R level for profit booking
  • Best in range-bound markets where S&R holds repeatedly
  • Win rate is higher but reward-to-risk can be limited

Breakout Trades

  • Buy when price breaks above resistance with strong volume and momentum
  • Sell/short when price breaks below support with strong volume
  • Wait for a candle close above/below the level (avoid false breakouts)
  • Breakout-retest: wait for price to break, then re-test the broken level before entering
  • Best in trending markets with strong directional momentum
  • Win rate is lower but reward-to-risk is typically higher

Nifty S&R Analysis Examples

Intraday Nifty Trade Using PDH/PDL

Nifty closed yesterday at 24,550. Previous day high (PDH) = 24,620. Previous day low (PDL) = 24,380.

Today, Nifty opens at 24,500 and drops to 24,390 (near PDL). A bullish hammer candle forms on the 15-minute chart at PDL. You enter long at 24,400 with stop-loss at 24,360 (below PDL).

Target 1: Central Pivot (24,517). Target 2: PDH (24,620). Risk = 40 pts, Reward = 117 to 220 pts. R:R = 1:3 to 1:5.5.

Swing Trade Using Weekly S&R

On the weekly chart, Nifty has tested the 23,800 support zone four times over the past 3 months. Each time it bounced 400-600 points. The zone is well-established.

Nifty drops to 23,850 on a Monday. You buy Nifty 24,000 CE (monthly expiry) and set a stop-loss at 23,700 (below support zone).

If the support holds and Nifty rallies to 24,400 (previous resistance), the trade yields 400+ points move in the underlying.

Psychological Level: Nifty at 25,000

As Nifty approaches 25,000 for the first time, expect heavy resistance. Option writers sell 25,000 CE aggressively, creating supply. First attempt usually fails.

Strategy: Sell 25,000 CE on the first test. If Nifty breaks and sustains above 25,000 with volume, switch to buying the breakout-retest.

Round number levels like 24,000, 24,500, 25,000 create massive open interest walls in the options chain, reinforcing them as S&R levels.

Common Misconceptions

"Support and resistance are exact price levels"

S&R are zones, not precise lines. Nifty may not bounce from exactly 24,000 but from the 23,980-24,020 zone. Always think in terms of S&R zones (20-50 point range for Nifty, wider for Bank Nifty).

"The more times a level is tested, the stronger it gets"

While multiple touches confirm a level, each test actually weakens it slightly because the pool of buyers (at support) gets depleted. After 4-5 touches, expect a breakout rather than another bounce. The level is "worn out."

"A break of S&R always means a big move"

False breakouts (fakeouts) are extremely common, especially in Nifty and Bank Nifty near expiry. Market makers and institutional traders often push price through S&R to trigger stop-losses before reversing. Wait for candle close confirmation and volume before trading a breakout.

"S&R from lower timeframes are just as reliable"

A resistance level on a 5-minute chart can be easily broken by a news event. Weekly and daily S&R levels are far more reliable because more market participants are aware of them. Always prioritize higher-timeframe S&R. Use lower timeframes only for fine-tuning entries.

S&R Best Practices

Use Zones, Not Lines

Mark S&R as zones (bands) rather than single lines. For Nifty, use a 20-30 point zone. For Bank Nifty, use a 50-100 point zone. This accounts for market noise and wicks.

Confluence Is King

The strongest S&R levels have multiple confirmations: a horizontal level that aligns with a trendline, a moving average, AND a round number. More confluence = more reliability.

Check Open Interest

On NSE, check the option chain for high OI at specific strikes. If 24,000 PE has massive OI, 24,000 is likely to act as strong support. OI data reinforces S&R analysis.

Volume at S&R

A bounce off support with increasing volume is more trustworthy than one with declining volume. Volume validates that real buying/selling pressure exists at the level.

Recent Levels Matter More

A support level from last week is more relevant than one from 6 months ago. Markets have short memories. Focus on the most recent and clearly visible S&R levels first.

Combine With Candlestick Patterns

S&R alone tells you where to look. Candlestick patterns (hammer, engulfing, doji) at S&R levels tell you when to act. Always wait for confirmation before entering a trade.

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