How to Trade in a Sideways Market? No chasing, no holding, low-risk stable approach



Hello everyone, I am Cautious and Steady.
In the previous 7 articles, we discussed the complete system for trending markets:
Trend, support and resistance, breakout, pullback, stop loss, take profit.
But many people ask me:
What to do when the market has no trend and is just oscillating?
Chasing leads to washouts, going long when it drops, going short when it rises.

Today’s 8th article is dedicated to:
Practical strategies for trading in a sideways market—no reckless moves, no getting trapped, stable wave riding.

1. First, understand: What is a sideways market?
No need for indicators, just look at two points:
1. The highs are roughly the same, the lows are roughly the same
2. No structure of continuously rising or falling
3. Candlesticks alternate back and forth, repeatedly switching between bullish and bearish

Simply put:
No up or down, sideways trading, oscillating back and forth.
In this kind of market, trend-following methods fail,
Trying to force trades only results in paying fees and repeatedly getting stopped out.

2. Three Iron Rules for a Sideways Market
1. Don’t guess breakouts, don’t enter early
2. Don’t chase highs or sell lows
3. Keep position sizes smaller than in trending markets (within 1%)
Remember:
In a sideways market, profits come from small trades and swing trades,
Not from large trend moves.
Avoid trading if you can; if you do, keep risk low.

3. Practical Entry Methods in a Sideways Market
For long positions, focus on one thing:
Price drops to the lower support → stabilizes → small long entry
- Watch for the candlestick lows
- Ensure candlesticks no longer make new lows
- Enter after a bullish candle closes and stabilizes

For short positions, focus on one thing:
Price rises to the upper resistance → encounters resistance → small short entry
- Watch for the candlestick highs
- Ensure candlesticks no longer make new highs
- Enter after a bearish candle closes under pressure

In the middle zone, do not trade.

4. How to set stop loss and take profit in a sideways market?
Stop Loss
- Longs: Place below the lower boundary of the sideways range
- Shorts: Place above the upper boundary of the sideways range

Since the range is small, position sizes must be even smaller.

Take Profit
Exit at the opposite boundary—don’t be greedy.
- Longs: Take profit at the upper resistance
- Shorts: Take profit at the lower support

No holding, no fighting, no overconfidence.

5. The 3 most common ways to get wiped out in a sideways market
1. Opening trades randomly in the middle—no reaching support or resistance, just guessing.
2. Holding long-term positions during sideways consolidation—weeks of range-bound trading turn you into a “shareholder.”
3. Chasing breakouts—90% of breakouts in a sideways market are false; chasing them leads to losses.

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CounselingAndSteadyvip
· 1h ago
Just go for it 👊
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