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I just saw that SOL is at $83.56 USD with a -2.56% drop in 24 hours, and that made me think about something many traders still don't fully understand: the difference between a real pullback and a trend reversal.
Many of you have probably experienced that moment where the price pulls back a little and you panic, thinking everything is going to collapse. But here’s the point — not every retracement is the end of a trend. A pullback is literally the market taking a breather before continuing in the same direction.
Let me break down how this works. When we have a strong uptrend, the pullback is that temporary downward move that happens while the main trend remains bullish. It’s like climbing a ladder — sometimes you take a step back to get a good grip before climbing higher. Volume decreases during these moments, and that’s a key signal. If you see volume collapsing during a correction, it’s probably a pullback, not a real reversal.
Now, the important part is knowing where to expect that pullback. It usually stops at support zones, Fibonacci levels (especially 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8%), or moving averages like MA20 or MA50. Professional traders use this to enter at a better price. You wait for the pullback to happen, confirm with reversal candles or pin bars, and then enter in the direction of the trend.
The confusion comes when traders don’t distinguish between a pullback and a real reversal. A reversal is when the entire trend changes direction — that usually comes with increased volume, breaking important technical structures, and can last weeks or months. A pullback? That’s a matter of minutes or days, volume decreases, and the trend structure remains intact.
A very common mistake I see is entering too early during the pullback. It’s still going down, and you’re already buying, only to have your stop loss hit because the retracement isn’t over. That’s why you need multiple confirmations — don’t just wait for it to hit support, look for a good close of the candle, volume confirmation, and clear signals from indicators like RSI or MACD.
The reality is that the pullback should be your best friend in trend trading. It’s where you get the best price to enter in favor of the main move. But you have to identify it correctly, use multiple technical tools, and never forget to manage risk with well-placed stop losses. If you master this, the retracement stops being fear and becomes an opportunity.