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So I've been thinking about POI lately - and honestly, if you're trading without understanding what POI full form actually means in trading, you're probably leaving money on the table.
Let me break this down. POI stands for Point of Interest, and it's basically that specific area on your chart where you expect the market to do something interesting - could be a bounce, could be a breakout, could be liquidity getting swept. It's where traders actually care about price.
These POI areas usually form from some pretty obvious signals. You've got your massive candles with long wicks, price gaps that haven't been filled, fakeouts that trap people, or those dense supply and demand zones where orders are just stacked up. Market makers love these spots too. The thing is, price treats POI like a magnet - it keeps coming back to visit these areas, either to bounce or to break through them.
Now, the most reliable POI types I've noticed are breakout candles (huge volume, real liquidity moving through), rejection candles (those hammer and shooting star patterns), imbalance zones (areas where price basically ghosted and never really traded), and pure supply/demand clusters.
Here's where it gets practical. When you spot a POI, you're waiting for price to come back and touch it. That's your entry signal, especially if you see reversal candles or structure breaks happening at that level. Stop loss? Put it 10-15 pips beyond the POI. And if you're combining this with RSI hitting 70 when price is near your POI, that's a pretty clean setup.
I'll use XRP as a real example. Say on a 15m chart you see this massive bullish candle that rips from $1.9500 to $2.0000 in one candle. That $1.9500-$1.9600 area becomes your POI - it's the launch point. Hours later when price drifts back down to that zone, you're watching it like a hawk. If a hammer forms at $1.9550, that's your confirmation. You could be looking at a move back up toward $2.0000, while keeping an eye on $1.9450 as your downside risk. (Obviously this is just how the analysis works, not a trade call.)
The real edge comes when you layer POI with market structure, EMA levels, and volume. Make sure you're trading with the trend, not against it. If your POI sits above the 50/200 EMA, it's acting as support. And volume confirmation on the bounce from POI? That's your extra confirmation signal.
Common mistakes though - people jump in before any confirmation appears, they ignore the bigger trend, they treat POI like it's some magic without proper risk management, or they're using it on timeframes that don't make sense for their strategy.
Once you really get what POI full form means and how these areas actually work in trading, you start seeing them everywhere. It changes how you read charts.