What is Optimal Trade Entry (OTE)?
A Fibonacci retracement zone between 62% and 79% of an impulsive move where high-probability continuation entries are taken.
The OTE zone defined
Take an impulsive directional move (clear swing low to swing high in an uptrend, or vice versa). Draw a Fibonacci retracement on the leg. The zone between the 62% and 79% retracement is the Optimal Trade Entry zone — sometimes called the "golden pocket" or "premium discount zone."
The theory: institutions buying back into an uptrend prefer deeper retracements than retail (who tend to buy 38-50% pullbacks). The 62-79% zone is where institutional buyers refill positions before pushing price to new highs.
Why 62-79% specifically?
Below 62% retracement (e.g. 50%), price hasn't pulled back enough — institutions haven't gotten fills at attractive prices yet. Above 79% (e.g. into the 88-100% zone), the original move's premise is at risk of failing entirely.
62-79% is the sweet spot: deep enough to attract institutional buyers, shallow enough that the original impulse direction is still intact. Below 79% the trend hypothesis is in serious doubt — beyond 100% (full retracement) the trend has reversed.
OTE confluence with Order Blocks and FVGs
OTE alone is a 50/50 bet without context. Power users stack confluences: when an OTE zone overlaps with a higher-timeframe bullish Order Block, AND a Fair Value Gap sits inside the same area, the probability of reaction at that level rises dramatically.
Trade execution: wait for price to enter the OTE zone, look for a lower-timeframe reversal signal (engulfing candle, structure shift, sweep & reclaim), enter with stop just past the 79% level or beyond the OB extreme — whichever provides the cleaner invalidation.
- Trading OTE in isolation — needs confluence with OB / FVG / structure
- Drawing fib from wrong points (must be impulsive swing low to high, not noise)
- No stop past 79% — if price violates the OTE zone, the thesis is dead
- Re-entering after stop loss without re-evaluating the trend
