Where are the key levels for tomorrow's session? Enter today's high, low, and close. Get pivot points, support, and resistance across Classic, Fibonacci, Woodie, and Camarilla methods.
Resistance
Resistance
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Pivot
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Pivot points are mathematical. Metis reads real chart patterns, volume, and trend structure to find levels the market actually respects.
Pivot points are calculated price levels based on the previous session's high, low, and close. The central pivot (PP) acts as the primary support and resistance level for the next session. Above it, you get R1, R2, and R3 (resistance zones). Below it, S1, S2, and S3 (support zones). Floor traders on Wall Street originally developed this system, and it remains one of the most widely used technical tools because it works across markets and timeframes.
Classic pivots are the standard. They produce well-spaced levels suitable for swing trading. Fibonacci pivots use 38.2%, 61.8%, and 100% of the range, aligning with natural retracement levels. Camarilla pivots produce tighter, more numerous levels (S1 to S4, R1 to R4) that intraday traders prefer. Woodie pivots give extra weight to the closing price. For Nifty and Bank Nifty swing trades, start with Classic. For intraday scalping, try Camarilla.
Check where the price opens relative to the pivot. A gap-up above R1 is bullish; a gap-down below S1 is bearish. Use S1 and S2 as buy zones for long trades with targets at PP and R1. Use R1 and R2 as short zones with targets at PP and S1. The levels work best on liquid instruments like Nifty 50, Bank Nifty, and large-cap stocks. Always combine pivot levels with volume confirmation before entering a trade.