Pullback trading buys a stock in an uptrend after it dips to support. It targets the opposite entry point from a breakout, but the principle — make the target the strongest leader — is identical. The appeal of the pullback is that the stop sits close, so reward-to-risk is excellent.
Why buy the pullback of a strong stock
Even in an uptrend, price doesn’t rise in a straight line. It advances, rests, advances again. Those "resting" stretches are pullbacks. The key is to target only stocks whose trend is still intact. A leader’s pullback draws waiting demand and tends to bounce at support; a broken stock’s decline is just a decline. The same "drop" has opposite backgrounds.
How far a dip is buyable — moving-average support
The most common pullback support is a moving average. Depth varies with strength.
- 10- / 20-day: the strongest leaders dip shallowly. Holding a short-term line and bouncing signals a very healthy trend.
- 50-day: the most trusted pullback support. A medium-term uptrend dipping to and holding the 50-day is a classic buy spot.
- Below the 150-day: a dip this deep suggests trend damage — possibly the start of a reversal, not a pullback.
Confirm the entry — "pullback" vs. "breakdown"
Touching support isn’t itself a buy — price can slice straight through. So confirm two things. First, does volume shrink into the dip? Drying volume means a healthy correction. Second, does a bounce candle (a lower wick, a strong up-bar) appear near support, showing real demand stepping in?
Breakout or pullback — which to use
They aren’t rivals but complements. When new highs abound in a strong tape, breakouts offer more setups; when the market corrects and leaders dip, pullbacks do. What matters either way is that the target is the strongest leader. Screen 8/8 top-RS leaders in Trend Screener, then trade a breakout if one clears a new high, or a pullback if it dips to support.