Why Stocks Drop Before a Rally Liquidity Grabs & Stop Hunting: Institutional traders (Smart Money) often need massive volume to enter large positions without causing a price spike. To find this volume, they may push prices below obvious support levels where many retail traders have placed stop-loss orders. Once these stops are triggered, they become market sell orders, providing the “liquidity” big players need to buy shares at a lower cost.
The “Spring” Pattern (Wyckoff Theory): In technical analysis, a “Spring” is a final bear trap near the end of an accumulation phase. Price briefly breaks support to “test” if there are any remaining sellers. If the price quickly rebounds back into the range, it signals that supply is exhausted and a markup phase (big rise) is likely to follow.
Shakeouts: This is a deliberate process where market makers suppress prices to clear out “impetuous chips” (retail investors holding for short-term profit). By scaring these holders into selling, institutions increase the average cost of shares held by the remaining public, reducing future selling pressure during the actual rally.
Earnings Traps: Stocks sometimes “gap down” immediately following good news or strong earnings. This happens if the news was already “priced in” or if institutions use the initial retail buying surge as an opportunity to sell into that demand, causing a temporary dip before the long-term uptrend resumes.
Common Pre-Rise Patterns Pattern Description Key Indicator Wyckoff Spring: A sharp dip below support that fails to stay down. Low volume on the dip, high volume on the recovery.
Cup and Handle: A small pullback (the “handle”) after a large recovery. Volume “dries up” during the handle’s dip.
Liquidity Sweep: Price spikes below recent lows to trigger stop-losses. Long “wick” on a candlestick chart.
Risk Management While these drops can signal an upcoming rise, they are indistinguishable from actual breakdowns (where the price continues to fall) without confirmation. Savvy traders often wait for the price to close back above the support level or for a volume surge before entering a position to ensure it is a “fakeout” rather than a real crash.
submitted by /u/Mediocre-Net7469 to r/pennystocks
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