It's been a fun ride, or perhaps a not-so-fun one if you were on the wrong side of that $NG pop then fizzle. We're looking at $NG holding around 5.18, having touched a day low of 5.075 and high of 5.29. What's interesting to me isn't just the intraday range, but the story it tells about momentum and the dreaded fakeout. For those still finding their feet with price action, a fakeout often presents as a break of a key level (support or resistance) that fails to follow through, quickly reversing direction.
Think about it: you've got a level everyone's watching, say 5.20 on $NG. Price pushes through, eyes light up, some folks jump in expecting a continuation. Then, BAM, it snaps back, often with surprising speed, trapping those who bought the breakout. The clever money, or perhaps the simply patient money, often uses these levels as magnets for liquidity, then takes the other side once the initial surge fades. It's a classic move. It requires a bit of cynicism, I admit, assuming that the market's initial move might just be a head-fake. Waiting for confirmation after a breakout, or even looking for a retest from the other side, can save a lot of grief. Or, as I often find myself saying, 'If it looks too easy, it probably is.' And natural gas, bless its volatile heart, rarely makes things easy.