You ever watch someone blow up their account and think, “That could’ve been me”? I have. More times than I’d like to admit. Here’s the thing about trading FET futures — most people approach it like they’re playing slots. Throw some money in, hope for the best, blame the market when it goes wrong. But there’s a better way. A strategy that actually works if you’re willing to put in the work.
I’ve been trading futures contracts for about three years now. Seen the bull runs, survived the crashes, watched friends disappear from the scene after one bad liquidation. What I’m about to share isn’t some magic system that guarantees profits. Nothing does. But it’s a framework that’s kept me in the game while others got wiped out.
The core idea is deceptively simple: use pivot points to find where the market might actually turn, then stack your probability in your favor before you pull the trigger. Most traders do the opposite. They see green, they chase, they get rekt. Let’s talk about why that happens and how to fix it.
Understanding Pivot Points in FET Futures
Pivot points are horizontal support and resistance lines drawn on your chart based on the previous period’s high, low, and close prices. The concept has been around forever in traditional markets, but crypto traders often ignore them in favor of sexier indicators. Big mistake. Here’s the disconnect — these levels work because they’re self-fulfilling prophecies. When hundreds of traders are watching the same R1 resistance level, that level becomes a self-reinforcing battleground.
For FET specifically, you’re looking at a relatively low market cap asset. That means higher volatility, wider spreads, and more noise. But it also means pivot levels tend to hold better than they do on larger caps where institutional traders dominate the price action. You’re dealing with a market where retail sentiment can move things dramatically in either direction.
What this means is that your pivot calculations need to be adjusted. Standard daily pivots work, but I’ve found that 4-hour and 1-hour pivot levels on FET give you better entry opportunities because they capture the intraday trading ranges more accurately. The reason is simple — this market doesn’t trend as cleanly as Bitcoin or Ethereum. It chops around, making false breakouts common. Shorter timeframe pivots help you filter out the noise.
Here’s my basic setup. Calculate your pivot levels using the standard formula: PP = (High + Low + Close) / 3. Then derive S1, S2, R1, and R2 from there. But here’s the technique most people skip — they don’t bother checking volume confirmation at these levels. Big error. A pivot level without volume confirmation is just a guess.
The Volume Problem Nobody Talks About
Let me tell you something that took me a year to figure out. Volume is the secret weapon most traders completely overlook. And I’m serious. Really. They stare at price charts for hours but never bother looking at who’s actually buying and selling at those critical levels.
When price approaches a pivot level, you want to see volume dry up if you’re expecting a bounce. That’s textbook — sellers are exhausted, buyers haven’t shown up yet. But here’s what most people miss: you also want to see the initial reaction be contained. If price slams through a support level on massive volume, that’s not a fakeout. That’s a real breakdown and you don’t want to be catching that falling knife.
87% of traders I see in trading groups completely ignore this. They see price touching S1 and automatically assume it’s time to long. Wrong. You need to see the volume signature match your thesis. On the flip side, when price approaches R1 with declining volume, that’s your cue that upward momentum is weakening and a rejection might be incoming.
Look, I know this sounds like basic stuff. But basic doesn’t mean easy to execute. I’ve watched my own trades go wrong because I was so focused on the price level that I forgot to check if the volume profile supported my entry. It’s a mental trap. You’re so convinced the level will hold that you ignore the evidence in front of you.
What I do now is simple. I wait for price to approach my target pivot level, then I minimize my chart to hide the price action. I look at volume only. Is volume increasing or decreasing? Does the volume bar at the level look like institutional interest or retail noise? Then I make my decision. This removes the emotional component that was killing my entries.
Position Sizing That Actually Keeps You in the Game
Here’s where most people mess up completely. They find a perfect entry, calculate their position size based on how much they want to make, not how much they can afford to lose. This is backwards. I’m not 100% sure about this, but from everything I’ve seen, risk management is the difference between being a trader and being a tourist.
The rule I follow is simple: never risk more than 1-2% of your account on a single trade. That means if your stop loss is 50 points away from entry, your position size should reflect that ceiling. If you’re trading FET futures with 20x leverage, a 50-point move against you isn’t just a bad day — it can be catastrophic. With leverage comes responsibility. The higher your leverage, the tighter your stop needs to be, or your position size needs to be smaller.
Here’s the math nobody does in their head. If you have a $10,000 account and you risk 2%, that’s $200 per trade maximum loss. If your stop is 50 points and you’re trading 1 contract, that means each point is worth how much? Most beginners don’t know. They just know they want to trade big because big trades mean big money. Except they also mean big losses, which is what actually happens most of the time.
I’ve seen traders blow through five figures in a week because they were taking 20-30% risk per trade. Leverage at 20x or 50x makes this especially dangerous. A 5% move against your position with 20x leverage doesn’t just hurt — it wipes you out completely. The liquidation rates on leveraged FET positions are brutal because of the volatility. You’re playing with fire if you’re not careful about position sizing.
So here’s what I tell every new trader I mentor. Start with the smallest position size you can stomach. I mean it. If you’re trading $100 contracts, trade $100 until you’ve proven you can follow your rules. The money will come later if you survive long enough to learn. Most people want to skip this phase. They want the returns without putting in the time. Those people don’t last.
The Entry Mechanics
Now we get to the actual pivot point strategy execution. This is where all the pieces come together. When price approaches a pivot level, you want to see three things before you enter: volume confirmation, price action rejection, and a clear risk-to-reward setup.
For longs: Wait for price to approach S1 or the main pivot point. Watch for a wicking rejection candle on higher timeframe. Then enter on the retest of that level. Your stop goes below the recent low. Your target is the next resistance level, ideally R1 or R2. This gives you at least a 2:1 risk-to-reward ratio, which is the minimum I’ll take.
For shorts: Same concept flipped. Price approaches R1 or the main pivot. You want to see the volume dry up at resistance, see a rejection candle form, then short on the retest. Stop goes above the recent high. Targets are the support levels below.
The retest entry is crucial because it gives you confirmation. You’re not guessing anymore. You’re watching the market tell you it rejected the level, then giving it a chance to confirm that rejection was real. This is how you avoid all those head-fake breakouts that slaughter most traders.
One thing I always check is the overall trend on the 4-hour chart. Pivots work better in the direction of the trend. If the trend is down and price rallies to R1, that’s a better short setup than if the trend is up. The reason is momentum. You’re working with the flow instead of against it.
What Most People Don’t Know About Pivot Calculations
Here’s the technique that separates the pros from the amateurs. Most traders use standard pivot calculations, but there’s a modification that works better for crypto’s 24/7 nature. Traditional pivots assume market hours, but crypto never closes. So I use the previous 24-hour high, low, and close instead of the typical trading session data.
What this means practically is your pivot levels shift slightly each hour as new data comes in. You’re essentially creating dynamic support and resistance zones that update in real-time. This gives you an edge because you’re always trading the most relevant levels, not yesterday’s levels that may already be stale.
The second thing nobody does is calculate Fibonacci confluence with their pivot levels. When price approaches a pivot level AND a 38.2% or 61.8% Fibonacci retracement at the same spot, that’s a high-probability zone. These two tools complement each other perfectly because they measure different things — pivots measure sentiment shifts, Fibonacci measures pullback depths.
When both align, you’re looking at a zone where multiple trader types have orders sitting. That’s the kind of setup you actually want to take. The more confluence you have, the higher your win rate becomes over time. This is what “edge” actually looks like — not some mysterious indicator, but simply stacking probabilities in your favor.
Managing Positions Once You’re In
Entering is the easy part. Managing the trade is where most people fall apart. Here’s my process once I’ve entered a position at a pivot level. First, I set my stop immediately. Not after I’ve had a chance to see if the trade goes my way. Immediately. If price starts moving my direction, I’ll sometimes tighten my stop to lock in profits, but I never move it against my position.
Then I watch for price action at the next pivot level. If I’m long and price approaches R1, I don’t just automatically close. I check the volume again. Is it increasing or decreasing? Does the approach look strong or weak? If it’s weak with declining volume, I might take partial profits and let the rest run. If it looks strong, I’ll let it go longer.
The hardest thing for me was learning to be patient with targets. Most traders want to close immediately when they see green. But if you’re getting a 2:1 or 3:1 setup at a pivot level, you want to let your winners run. The pivot level might not be the end of the move. It might just be a pause. I usually trail my stop behind the price action using the swing lows as my guide.
Sometimes the market does something weird. Price blows through R1 on huge volume and just keeps going. In those cases, I don’t fight it. I either exit or adjust my target to the next level. The market doesn’t care about your analysis. It does what it wants. Your job is to manage risk, not predict the future.
The Emotional Side Nobody Discusses
You can have the perfect strategy and still lose money if you can’t manage your emotions. I’ve been there. Watching a trade go against you is painful. The urge to move your stop, to add to a losing position, to just close everything and walk away — these urges are real and powerful. Here’s what helps me: I have rules, and I write them down before I trade.
When I’m in a trade and emotions start creeping in, I look at my written rules. They say things like “stop goes below recent low” or “exit if price closes below pivot on 4-hour.” It’s black and white. No interpretation. Either the rule is triggered or it isn’t. This removes the emotional component from the decision.
Another thing: I never check positions constantly. Checking every five minutes is a recipe for panic selling or buying. I set alerts at my entry and exit levels and walk away. Seriously. The less you stare at the screen, the better your decisions tend to be. This is not natural advice. Every instinct tells you to watch. You have to fight that instinct.
The other thing I’ve noticed is that losing streaks hit everyone. Even experienced traders go 5, 10, sometimes 15 trades in a row without a win. What separates professionals from amateurs is that pros don’t change their system after a losing streak. They trust their process because they’ve backtested it and know it works over many trades. Amateurs throw everything out after three losses and start chasing the next shiny strategy.
If you’re serious about trading FET futures, keep a journal. Write down every trade: entry, exit, reason, emotions, lessons learned. This is tedious and boring but it works. You’ll start seeing patterns in your behavior that are costing you money. I know it sounds like extra work, but this is the work that actually matters.
Platform Choice and Execution Quality
Where you trade matters almost as much as how you trade. I’ve used multiple platforms over the years. Some have terrible slippage during volatile periods. Others have frequent disconnections right when you need to exit. These issues can turn a winning strategy into a losing one in real-time.
Look for platforms that offer low latency execution and reliable order fills. For FET futures, liquidity matters. Some exchanges have deep order books with tight spreads, while others are thin and slippy. If you’re trying to enter or exit quickly at a pivot level, you need your order to fill at or near your target price. This is especially important with the leverage involved in futures trading.
Fees also eat into your returns over time. If you’re trading frequently, the spread between maker and taker fees can add up to significant amounts. Some platforms offer tiered fee structures based on volume. If you’re serious about this, the fee structure should be part of your platform decision.
Final Thoughts on the Pivot Point Approach
Here’s what I want you to take away from this. The pivot point strategy for FET futures isn’t complicated. It doesn’t require fancy indicators or expensive software. It requires discipline, patience, and a willingness to follow your rules even when your emotions are screaming at you to do otherwise.
The market will always present opportunities. Every day there are pivot level setups playing out. The question isn’t whether opportunities exist. The question is whether you’ll be ready to take them when they do. That means having your analysis done before the session starts. That means knowing your entry, exit, and stop loss levels before you click buy or sell.
Most people won’t do this. They’ll wake up, check the charts, see something that looks good, and jump in without a plan. Those people are providing liquidity for traders like us. If you’re willing to put in the preparation, to wait for the setups that actually match your criteria, you have a real shot at being profitable long-term.
The leverage is there for people who want to amplify gains. But it’s also there to amplify losses, which happens much more frequently. My advice? Use lower leverage than you think you need. Build your account slowly. Survive long enough to get really good at this. That’s the only path that actually works.
Frequently Asked Questions
What leverage should I use for FET futures pivot point trades?
For most traders, 10x to 20x leverage is more appropriate than maximum leverage. Higher leverage means tighter stop losses required to manage risk, and tighter stops mean you’re more likely to get stopped out by normal market noise. Start conservative and adjust based on your actual results over many trades.
How do I know if a pivot level will hold or break?
Volume is your best indicator. When price approaches a pivot level, look for declining volume on the approach and a rejection candle. Also check the overall trend direction. Pivots hold more often when they align with trend direction. If price blows through a level on high volume, that’s usually a real breakdown rather than a fakeout.
Can this strategy work on other crypto futures besides FET?
The core principles apply to any futures contract. Pivot points work because they represent psychological price levels that many traders watch. However, different assets have different characteristics. High-cap assets like Bitcoin have cleaner pivot behavior while lower-cap assets like FET have more noise but potentially stronger reversals at key levels.
How often should I recalculate my pivot levels?
For daily pivots, recalculate at the start of each trading session. If you’re trading on shorter timeframes like 1-hour or 4-hour, recalculate more frequently as those levels update throughout the day. Many platforms offer automatic pivot indicators that handle this for you.
What’s the biggest mistake new traders make with this strategy?
The most common error is not waiting for confirmation before entering. They see price approaching a pivot level and immediately jump in without checking volume, without seeing a rejection candle, without confirming the setup. This leads to a low win rate even though the strategy itself is sound. Patience at the entry is crucial.
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Last Updated: January 2025
Disclaimer: Crypto contract trading involves significant risk of loss. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Never invest more than you can afford to lose. This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice.
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