What is a Fibonacci cluster?
A Fibonacci cluster (also called Fib confluence) is a price zone where two or more Fibonacci levels from different wave degrees overlap. Clusters often produce reactions because multiple groups of traders are watching the same level, creating self-reinforcing support or resistance.
Full Explanation
Fibonacci clusters form when independent Fibonacci projections from different wave structures coincide at the same price zone. Example: the 1.618 extension of a sub-wave inside Wave 3 lines up with the 1.272 extension of the parent Wave 3 from Wave 1. When this happens, both retail and institutional traders watching the parent count and the sub-count are positioned around the same price level. The cluster acts as a high-probability reaction zone. Clusters are particularly powerful when they combine retracement levels from one structure with extension targets from another — three independent confirmations at one price. Artavest's wave-count analysis explicitly identifies Fibonacci clusters as part of the key-levels disclosure on each instrument.
- → Elliott Wave Theory Guide — the 5-3 pattern, rules, Fibonacci, wave degrees
- → How to Count Elliott Waves — 6-step process used on 108 instruments
- → Elliott Wave Fibonacci Guide — the 7 core ratios and how they're applied
- → Rules and Guidelines — the 3 absolute rules + 7 guidelines
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