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Moving Average Bounce Strategy for GBP/AUD

The complete playbook for running a moving average bounce setup on GBP/AUD — when it works, when it fails, and how to size your risk.

Reviewed by the Candleread desk · Updated 2026-04-09

The short answer

The moving average bounce strategy applied to GBP/AUD typically targets a 1:2–1:3 risk-to-reward ratio with a hold time of 4 hours – 5 days. GBP/AUD is a minor pair with a 2.5-pip spread and 130-pip average daily range, which provides plenty of room for this strategy to work. Best timeframes for this combination: H4, D1.

How Moving Average Bounce Works on GBP/AUD

Apply the 20 EMA and/or 50 EMA on H4 or D1. In an uptrend, wait for price to pull back to the MA. When a bullish candle forms at the MA, enter long. Stop below the MA. Applied to GBP/AUD: Moves on BoE vs RBA divergence and risk sentiment. Similar volatility to GBP/JPY. Needs wider stops. Popular with trend-following swing traders. Enter when price pulls back to a key moving average and bounces in the trend direction. Simple, visual, repeatable.

Moving Average Bounce Rules for GBP/AUD

  1. 1

    Step 1

    Confirm the trend: price above 50 EMA = uptrend, below = downtrend

  2. 2

    Step 2

    Wait for pullback to the 20 EMA (fast) or 50 EMA (slower, stronger)

  3. 3

    Step 3

    Enter on a bullish/bearish candle that closes off the MA

  4. 4

    Step 4

    Stop: 10–20 pips beyond the MA on the opposite side

  5. 5

    Step 5

    Target: recent swing high/low or 2–3R

  6. 6

    Step 6

    Exit if price closes below the MA on a closing basis (not a wick)

Best Conditions

Trending markets where the 20 EMA or 50 EMA acts as dynamic support/resistance. Works best when the MA has been respected 3+ times in the current trend. For GBP/AUD specifically, the best session is the London session + Asian–London overlap. Trade during that window for tightest spreads and deepest liquidity.

When This Setup Fails

Sideways markets where price chops through the MA repeatedly. If the MA is flat, there's no trend — don't trade the bounce. On GBP/AUD, also watch out for major economic releases that override technical setups — check the calendar before entering.

Key Numbers

The math for running moving average bounce on GBP/AUD:

  • Typical R:R: 1:2–1:3
  • Hold time: 4 hours – 5 days
  • Best timeframes: H4, D1
  • GBP/AUD spread: 2.5 pips
  • GBP/AUD daily range: 130 pips
  • Difficulty: beginner

Key takeaways

  • Moving Average Bounce on GBP/AUD: 1:2–1:3 R:R, hold time 4 hours – 5 days
  • Best timeframes: H4, D1
  • GBP/AUD spread (2.5 pips) — factor it into stop distance
  • Trade during London session + Asian–London overlap for best conditions
  • Risk 1% per trade, always — the calculator does the sizing

Frequently asked

Does moving average bounce work on GBP/AUD?+
Yes — GBP/AUD is a minor pair with 130-pip average daily range and 2.5-pip spreads, which requires careful sizing to account for spread, but moving average bounce can still work if you widen your stops and targets accordingly.
What timeframe should I use for moving average bounce on GBP/AUD?+
The best timeframes for moving average bounce are H4, D1. On GBP/AUD, the London session + Asian–London overlap provides the most volume and tightest spreads for this setup.
What risk-to-reward should I target?+
Moving Average Bounce typically targets 1:2–1:3 R:R with a hold time of 4 hours – 5 days. On GBP/AUD, the 130-pip daily range gives you enough room to hit these targets during the right session.
Is moving average bounce good for beginners?+
Yes. Moving Average Bounce is one of the more beginner-friendly strategies. The rules are clear, the setups are visual, and the risk management is straightforward. GBP/AUD is a solid pair to practice it on.

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