■ Don't look at the range of S2 to R2 as support and resistance levels. Rather, consider them oversold (S) and
overbought (R) areas.
■ S2 to R2 range of values across daily, weekly, and monthly periods: If two values are close together then they
lend more significance to the area.
■ If the market trends on day 1, the odds rise tremendously that the market will be range bound between daily
S1 and daily R1 the next day.
■ In a quiet market when traders are waiting for an important earnings announcement or economic report,
look for daily R1 and S1 levels to hold and for the market to return to the daily pivot.
■ A move outside of daily R1 or S1 usually does not mean a breakout.
■ The odds suggest that the entire week's price action will remain between weekly R2 and S2.
■ Avoid going long when the market moves above weekly R2 (it's overbought)
and avoid going short when price moves below weekly S2 (oversold).
■ Consider going short at weekly R1 or long at weekly S1 with a profit objective of the weekly pivot.
■ Consider going long at weekly S2 or short at weekly R2 with a profit objective of weekly S1 or R1, respectively.
» There often will be confluences when comparing the weekly and daily S2 to R2 levels
Here are the formulas to calculate daily, weekly, monthly, etc. Floor Trader Pivot Points: