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Fake Breakout Identification at a Glance: The 3 Key Points of True Breakouts
Hello everyone, I am Cautious and Steady.
In the last article, I discussed the trading filtering mechanism, which many people found very practical.
Today, I will continue with pure technical analysis, addressing the most headache-inducing topic:
How to distinguish fake breakouts from real breakouts at a glance?
No nonsense, no mysticism, all practical content you can use directly.
1. 90% of people get trapped by "chasing breakouts"
Are you often like this:
Immediately chase after a breakout, get swept out right after entering
Think a trend is starting, but it gets pulled back by a single needle
Stop-loss gets hit, and the market really moves away
It's not bad luck,
It's that you don't know how to identify fake and real breakouts.
A genuine breakout is never as simple as "breaking a certain line."
2. For real breakouts, focus on 3 core aspects
1. K-line after the breakout: must have "strength"
- True breakout: large-bodied candles, steady closing, no repeated upper/lower wicks
- Fake breakout: long upper/lower shadows, weak closing, back-and-forth tugging
Mnemonic:
A true breakout doesn’t dawdle; if it dawdles, it’s not a real breakout.
2. Breakout location: must be at a "key structural level"
- True breakout: breaking previous high, previous low, trendline, upper/lower boundary of consolidation zone
- Fake breakout: breaking insignificant small moving averages or minor lines
Mnemonic:
Location isn’t everything; a fierce breakout can still be a trap.
3. Retest after the breakout: must be "supportive"
Typical true breakout:
Breakout → retest for confirmation → continue trending
Typical fake breakout:
Breakout → sharp drop/rise back immediately → traps some traders
Mnemonic:
No retest, no confirmation, likely a trap.
3. My practical "3-step filter for breakouts"
1. First, check if it breaks a key structural level
2. Then, see if the K-line shows strength and a solid body
3. Finally, wait for a retest that doesn’t break before entering
All three steps satisfied → it’s a real breakout.
Miss one step, I won’t enter.
4. The 2 most common fake breakout patterns
1. Needle-shaped breakout
A long wick pierces the zone, then immediately pulls back.
→ Standard trap for false signals or false breakouts.
2. No-volume breakout
Volume doesn’t increase, volatility is small, forced break.
→ No capital backing, unlikely to go far.
When encountering these two, just give up and don’t participate.
5. The simplest practical summary
Real breakout: steady, fierce, clean.
Fake breakout: chaotic, hollow, repetitive.
You don’t need complicated indicators,
just understand the strength of the K-line and the structural position.