
When markets run hot, the hardest decision isn’t what to buy — it’s whether to keep pressing your winners or start protecting your capital. Chasing strength can feel tempting, but without a plan, traders often give back gains just as quickly as they earned them.
This week’s featured piece offers a simple, repeatable framework to navigate late-stage strength without guessing the top.
The Three-Signal Exhaustion Check
Use these signals together.
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One signal ON = caution
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Two signals ON = defensive
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Three signals ON = hedge or trim positions
1. Failed Follow-Through
After a breakout or gap-up, price stalls the next day and fills the gap.
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Action: Downgrade conviction; new longs must be A+ setups only.
2. Volume Divergence
Price makes higher highs while volume trends lower (or up days show light volume while down days have heavy volume).
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Action: Favor partial profits into strength; avoid chasing extended moves.
3. Overextension
RSI > 70 and price stretched >1.5–2× ATR above a rising 20-day moving average.
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Action: Tighten stops to the 10–20 day EMA/MA or the last swing low.
Quick Rule: If the index makes a marginal new high on weak breadth and volume, don’t pay up — wait for a pullback to reclaim levels.
Press or Protect: A Decision Tree
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All three signals OFF: Press winners; add on clean pullbacks with confirmation.
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One signal ON: Reduce size on new entries; keep stops tight.
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Two signals ON: Scale out 25–50% of extended positions; consider light hedges.
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Three signals ON: Rotate to defense — raise cash, hedge core exposure, and trade smaller.
A Tactical Hedge Menu
If exhaustion stacks up, here are practical hedging tools:
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Index put spreads (SPY/QQQ): Defined risk, time-boxed protection.
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Volatility exposure (e.g., UVXY options): Only short-term; exits predefined.
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Sector rotation: Reduce beta; favor healthcare, staples, or quality factors.
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Cash: Sometimes the best hedge. Dry powder beats forced selling.
Entry & Exit Rules You Can Copy
Entry (pullback play):
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Wait for price to tag the 20-day MA and print a reversal candle (hammer/engulfing).
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Require either RSI > its MA or volume > 20-day avg on the reversal day.
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Enter on next-session confirmation (break of reversal high or close > prior high).
Exit (trend protection):
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Initial stop: 1× ATR below entry or below the reversal candle low (whichever is wider).
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Trail: After 1.5× ATR in your favor, move half to breakeven; use 10-day EMA or swing low for the rest.
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Time stop: If the trade doesn’t work in 3–5 sessions, exit and recycle capital.
Position Sizing That Survives Whipsaws
Risk small per trade (0.5–1.0% of account) so you can take multiple shots without stress.
Template:
Position Size = (Account × Risk%) ÷ (Entry – Stop)
Example: $50,000 account, risk 0.75% = $375.
Entry $100, stop $97 = $3/share risk → 125 shares.
The Daily Checklist
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Premarket: Breadth (adv/dec), futures vs. prior close, key earnings/data.
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Intraday: Is volume confirming moves? Any failed follow-through on leaders?
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Close: Did indexes hold the 10–20 day? Are new highs broad or narrow?
Putting It All Together
You don’t need to call the exact top. You need a playbook that adapts.
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If breadth and volume confirm → press winners, buy pullbacks, pyramid selectively.
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If confirmation fades → take partial profits, rotate down in beta, hedge exposure.
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If exhaustion stacks → get defensive first — you can always add back when momentum proves itself.
Bottom Line
Markets reward preparation, not prediction. By combining the three-signal exhaustion check, a clear decision tree, and disciplined position sizing, you’ll know when to press your advantage — and when to step back and protect gains.
At FFR Trading, the trader’s we work with are market experts in navigating different market climates. Give us a call at 800-883-0524 to discuss your trading goals and find a trader and strategy to meet those goals.
📌 Educational only. Not investment advice. Trading involves risk. Consider your objectives and risk tolerance before acting.
