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I used to think every move above resistance or below support meant something. That was expensive. I'd jump in on what looked like the breakout, only to get stopped out while watching price reverse and laugh at me from the other side. The real lesson? Learning to spot the difference between a real move and a fake one changed everything about how I trade.
So what separates them? A real breakout has conviction behind it. Price moves decisively above or below a key level—whether that's resistance, support, a trendline, or a pattern boundary—and it stays there. You see strong momentum, the move keeps going in the same direction, and volatility expands. When these work, they tend to run hard.
A fakeout is the trap. Price briefly pierces the level, triggers all the stops sitting above and below, pulls in the breakout entries, then reverses back inside the range like nothing happened. No real power behind it. The reason fakeouts happen constantly is simple: that's how the market hunts liquidity. Big players know where the stops are. They know where the obvious trades are. So they fade them.
Here's what actually separates them in real time. Volume tells you everything—real breakouts come with clear expansion, way above average. Fakeouts? Flat or declining volume, zero urgency. Look at the candles too. Real breakouts show strong bodies, small wicks, clean closes above or below the level. Fakeouts have long wicks, indecision, rejection back into the range. And then there's follow-through. Real breakouts keep moving. Fakeouts reverse fast, sometimes the same session.
The biggest shift for me was stopping the FOMO entries. I stopped treating the first touch like the signal. Now I wait. My checklist is simple: Does the volume actually spike? Is the close strong, not just a wick? Can it retest the level and hold? Does this align with the higher timeframe or is there an actual catalyst? I also stay away from the obvious trap zones—tight ranges, round numbers, low-liquidity periods. That's where fakeouts live.
Most of my early losses didn't come from bad analysis. They came from being early. The market loves to fake out the obvious move before the real one starts. If you can master this difference, you cut out a huge chunk of unnecessary losses and let the best trades actually run. That's the edge.