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Stops, targets, and risk around a zone

By FibSetups · Updated July 2026

A zone entry has a rare property: the market has already told you where you are wrong. Management is mostly about not overriding that information.

The stop: beyond the zone, plus room

The premise of a support-cluster long is that the zone holds. The premise is dead when price settles decisively beyond the zone’s far edge — so that is where the stop belongs: past the far boundary with a margin for noise (a fraction of ATR, or beyond the nearest structural low). A stop inside the zone contradicts your own thesis; you are paying for evidence and then refusing to use it.

Targets: let the extensions do it

Project the extensions of the move you expect to resume — the same swing family that built your zone. The standard ladder:

Target Level Common handling
T1 1.272 extension Scale partial, move stop to entry
T2 1.618 extension Scale again, trail the remainder
T3 2.618 extension Runner target for trend continuations

On a roadmap chart these objectives are already drawn — the roadmap target card names the extension and price — and an alert rule can watch each one for you.

Risk before reward

Because the stop distance is defined by the zone and the targets by the extensions, the reward-to-risk ratio is computable before entry. If the zone is wide and T1 is close, the trade can be a poor bet even at a beautiful cluster — pass, and let the next row of the scanner deal you a better hand. Selectivity is a position: the trader who only plays strong setups is compounding an edge the always-in trader never has.

The written plan

Entry trigger, stop price, T1/T2/T3, and the invalidation that cancels everything — all five are knowable while the market is closed. Write them down, set the alerts, and let the session execute a decision you made calmly.