Type Here to Get Search Results !

Stock Support & Resistance Calculator with Stoploss

Piyush Sharma 0

📊 Pivot-Based Support/Resistance & Targets (NSE/BSE Style)

Notes: Pivots are typically calculated from previous session OHLC and used for the next session. Educational purposes only—use risk management.

How this tool works (simple & powerful)

This calculator uses standard pivot formulas (Classic / Fibonacci / Camarilla) to generate objective support & resistance levels from the high, low and close of the selected period. It then suggests two stoploss options — strict and flexible — and two target prices. To make outputs more reliable in the absence of real-time historical series, you can supply indicator values (RSI, MACD histogram, Stochastic, OBV trend). The tool uses those values to slightly tighten or loosen stoploss and target placement, producing a confidence percentage visible in the results card.


Indicator influence explained

Indicators alone do not guarantee results, but they help refine the tool’s risk posture:

  • RSI: A high RSI (>70) indicates exhaustion — tool lowers confidence and suggests tighter stoploss. RSI between 40–60 keeps default settings.
  • MACD histogram: Positive histogram increases confidence and widens targets (momentum), negative reduces confidence and tightens stoploss.
  • Stochastic: Overbought/oversold zones influence whether to choose a conservative or aggressive target.
  • OBV trend: Uptrend supports wider targets; downtrend pushes stricter risk controls.

Why this approach is accurate and trustworthy

Accuracy comes from combining proven mathematical pivot formulations with human-confirmation signals (indicators). The tool is not a black-box buy signal — it provides objective levels and tells you how confident the levels are given the indicators you input. Because it runs client-side in the browser, it is fast and private — readers can test many tickers and scenarios without external delay.

Real-life example & step-by-step

Imagine you follow a blue-chip stock and you want a swing entry. You select the stock label, enter the daily high, low and previous close, then press Calculate. The tool returns Pivot, R1–R3 and S1–S3. Suppose price is near S1 and the indicator panel shows RSI = 42 (neutral) and MACD histogram positive — the tool gives medium-high confidence and suggests a flexible stoploss near S1 and strict stoploss slightly below S2. Targets are set at R1 and R2. You can copy these levels to your app and place orders with defined risk-reward.

Practical trading tips

  1. Always use a strict stoploss to protect capital — this tool shows strict and flexible options for that purpose.
  2. Combine the tool with volume confirmation — rising volume near support increases the chance of a bounce.
  3. Use targets to plan partial profit-taking (e.g., sell half at Target 1, trail stop for the rest).
  4. Backtest the tool personally on a sample of past trades — test for your timeframes and preferences.

Limitations & transparency

We do not pull live historical series or place orders for you. Because we don't have server-side historical data, indicator inputs are manual. This tradeoff keeps the tool privacy-respecting and fast. For intraday algorithmic trading you should integrate this logic with live market data and backtested rules — this tool is ideal for idea generation and planning.

Why traders will revisit this page

The combination of a modern UI, multiple calculation methods, indicator tuning, Indian stock labels and instant client-side results makes this a daily planner for active traders. Readers will revisit to check levels each session or to test different indicator assumptions quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate are these levels? +
Levels are computed using standard pivot formulas. Accuracy is high for producing objective zones but you should combine them with indicators and volume. Accuracy increases when you feed correct high/low/close values.
Do you fetch live prices for Indian stocks? +
No — by design this tool stays client-side and does not fetch live data. Select a stock as a label, then paste the CMP/high/low/close from your broker or exchange feed.
What is strict vs flexible stoploss? +
Strict stoploss is conservative (placed below a major support like S2) to limit losses. Flexible stoploss is nearer (below S1) and can be used with a trailing rule if trade moves in favour.
Can I use fib retracement with this tool? +
Yes — choose Fibonacci method to compute retracement-based support/resistance and targets derived from high-low ranges and fib ratios.
Tip: We tried our level to make best and user friendly tool for our website visitors .

Resistance, Support, Stoploss ,stocks levels

Indian Flag

Piyush Sharma

Qualifications: MBA (India), MBA (Australia), Master of Professional Accounting (Australia).

18+ years in the Indian stock market and running this website for 15+ years. Founder of PS International Group and Hamarijeet.com — popular for study-visa guidance, career help, government schemes, jobs and digital product updates.

Post a Comment

0 Comments
* Please Don't Spam Here. All the Comments are Reviewed by Admin.

Top Post Ad