01
52-week high — prior resistance
The 52-week high marks the last price where sellers overwhelmed buyers. Investors who bought near that peak may sell when they return to break-even, creating real overhead supply. Short sellers can also have stops just above the high, so a clean breakout can trigger forced buying.
That double dynamic — supply from trapped longs, plus potential short-covering above the level — is why this remains one of the most useful first targets.
Use when the stock is still below its 52-week high. Check this first.
02
ATR multiple — volatility projection
ATR measures how much the stock typically moves in a day. It gives you a ruler scaled to the stock itself rather than to an arbitrary percentage. If a move has already travelled several ATRs from the breakout, it is becoming extended relative to its own recent behaviour.
The worksheet therefore targets the next clean ATR extension above current price, rather than blindly reusing a fixed 3×, 5× or 7× number that may already be behind the trade.
Use in blue-sky moves, or when prior resistance is not useful.
03
Round number — psychological resistance
Round numbers attract attention because traders, funds and algorithms often cluster orders around memorable levels. A stock approaching $10, $15 or $20 can run into profit-taking simply because many independent participants anchor to the same clean number.
For options, this is a useful quick target because it requires very little chart interpretation. It should not override better technical levels, but it is a good sanity-check.
Use when you need a quick reference target with no deeper chart work.
04
Measured move — base projection
The measured move projects the height of the base from the breakout level. The logic is that the first impulse leg often reveals the force of the buying pressure; if the catalyst remains intact, a second leg can travel a similar distance.
This is especially useful when the stock is breaking into multi-year highs or all-time-high territory, where there may be no obvious historical resistance above.
Use when you have a clear base low and breakout level.
Confluence = Confidence
When two or more methods converge on the same price area, that level becomes a better target. A round number that also sits near the 52-week high is stronger than either method alone. If the methods are widely scattered, the nearest valid target is usually the cleaner exit, especially with a single contract.
Situation
Stock below 52-week high
Use
52-week high as the primary target
Situation
Stock above 52-week high / blue sky
Use
ATR extension and measured move
Situation
Need a quick target without chart analysis
Use
Round-number target as a reference point
Situation
Two or more methods agree in the same area
Use
Higher confidence — commit more cleanly to the planned exit