1 The Edge — why it works
A pause in demand, not a reversal
A sharp rally on heavy volume (the "flagpole") followed by a shallow, quiet pullback (the "flag") is the signature of a trend catching its breath.
The light volume on the pullback says sellers are not taking control — buyers are simply pausing. When price breaks back above the flag, the larger move usually resumes, giving a clean, defined-risk entry into an established trend rather than a guess at a top or bottom.
2 Where it works — and doesn't
Tight flags in real trends
Works best when…
- A strong, high-volume impulse precedes the flag.
- The pullback is shallow and on clearly lighter volume.
- The flag is tight and brief (a few bars), not a deep slide.
- The stock and market are trending up intraday.
Fails / avoid when…
- No real impulse first — there is no trend to continue.
- The pullback is deep or on heavy volume (real selling).
- A long, sloppy, sideways drift — momentum has died.
- A weak or reversing market dragging the name down.
3 Setup checklist
All true before you act
- ✓A clean flagpole. A sharp, high-volume advance just occurred.
- ✓A light-volume flag. The pullback is shallow with visibly lower volume.
- ✓Tight structure. A few orderly bars, not a deep or drawn-out decline.
- ✓Trend intact. Price holds well above the prior base and key intraday levels.
- ✓Market support. The broad market is not actively selling off.
4 The process
From signal to managed trade
Entry
Enter on the break above the flag's highs (the minor resistance formed during the pullback).
Stop (1R)
Just below the flag's low. If price breaks the flag down, the continuation thesis is wrong. Entry − flag low = 1R.
Position size
Risk a small fixed % of the account; shares = risk ÷ 1R.
Exit & management
Measure a target from the flagpole height projected off the breakout, or trail under new higher lows. Scale out into strength.
5 Worked example (illustrative)
One trade, start to finish, in R
| Account / risk per trade | $25,000 · 1% = $250 |
| Entry (flag breakout) | $105.30 |
| Stop (below the flag) — 1R | $103.50 · 1R = $1.80/share |
| Position size = $250 ÷ $1.80 | ≈ 138 shares |
| Continuation to +3R | $110.70 |
| If it works: +3R | + $750 (≈ +3.0%) |
| If it fails: −1R | − $250 (≈ −1.0%) |
6 Honest expectancy
Continuation is a probability, not a promise
Flags fail often enough that risk control is everything; the edge is that the winners — full continuation moves — are larger than the small, fixed losses.
Example: win 45% at +2R, lose 55% at −1R → (0.45 × 2) − (0.55 × 1) = +0.35R per trade. An expectation, never a guarantee.
7 Make it yours
Test before you trade
A no-risk validation routine
Scroll intraday history and mark flagpole → flag → breakout sequences. Record entry, flag-low stop, and the continuation in R before seeing the outcome. Pay attention to volume on the flag — the lighter it is, the better the setup tends to behave.
8 Common mistakes
How traders blow this up
- No flagpole. A flag without a strong prior impulse is just chop.
- Heavy-volume flag. Rising volume on the pullback signals real selling — skip it.
- Buying inside the flag. Wait for the breakout; early entries get shaken out.
- Stop too tight or too loose. Place it just beyond the flag, sized to honor 1R.
- Holding a failed break. If price falls back through the flag, the thesis is void.