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Pullback / Retracement Strategy for EUR/NZD

The complete playbook for running a pullback / retracement setup on EUR/NZD — 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 pullback / retracement strategy applied to EUR/NZD typically targets a 1:2–1:4 risk-to-reward ratio with a hold time of 4 hours – 5 days. EUR/NZD is a minor pair with a 2.5-pip spread and 110-pip average daily range, which provides plenty of room for this strategy to work. Best timeframes for this combination: H1, H4, D1.

How Pullback / Retracement Works on EUR/NZD

Confirm the trend on D1 or H4. Wait for price to retrace to a key level (Fibonacci 38.2%–61.8%, moving average, or prior support/resistance). Enter when price shows rejection at the level (pin bar, engulfing candle). Applied to EUR/NZD: One of the more volatile crosses. Trends aggressively when ECB and RBNZ diverge on policy. Wider spreads — factor that into sizing. Wait for price to pull back against the main trend, then enter in the trend direction at a discount. The safest way to enter a trending market.

Pullback / Retracement Rules for EUR/NZD

  1. 1

    Step 1

    Confirm trend direction on D1 or H4 (higher highs/lows for uptrend)

  2. 2

    Step 2

    Wait for pullback to a key level (Fib, MA, S/R)

  3. 3

    Step 3

    Look for a rejection candle at the level (pin bar, engulfing)

  4. 4

    Step 4

    Enter on the close of the rejection candle

  5. 5

    Step 5

    Stop: below the pullback low (long) or above pullback high (short)

  6. 6

    Step 6

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

Best Conditions

Best in established trends with clear higher highs/lows. Works well after a strong impulse move that leaves a Fibonacci retracement zone. For EUR/NZD specifically, the best session is the Asian–London overlap. Trade during that window for tightest spreads and deepest liquidity.

When This Setup Fails

Fails in choppy, trendless markets. If the pullback is too deep (beyond 78.6% Fib), the trend may be reversing — not just retracing. On EUR/NZD, also watch out for major economic releases that override technical setups — check the calendar before entering.

Key Numbers

The math for running pullback / retracement on EUR/NZD:

  • Typical R:R: 1:2–1:4
  • Hold time: 4 hours – 5 days
  • Best timeframes: H1, H4, D1
  • EUR/NZD spread: 2.5 pips
  • EUR/NZD daily range: 110 pips
  • Difficulty: beginner

Key takeaways

  • Pullback / Retracement on EUR/NZD: 1:2–1:4 R:R, hold time 4 hours – 5 days
  • Best timeframes: H1, H4, D1
  • EUR/NZD spread (2.5 pips) — factor it into stop distance
  • Trade during Asian–London overlap for best conditions
  • Risk 1% per trade, always — the calculator does the sizing

Frequently asked

Does pullback / retracement work on EUR/NZD?+
Yes — EUR/NZD is a minor pair with 110-pip average daily range and 2.5-pip spreads, which requires careful sizing to account for spread, but pullback / retracement can still work if you widen your stops and targets accordingly.
What timeframe should I use for pullback / retracement on EUR/NZD?+
The best timeframes for pullback / retracement are H1, H4, D1. On EUR/NZD, the Asian–London overlap provides the most volume and tightest spreads for this setup.
What risk-to-reward should I target?+
Pullback / Retracement typically targets 1:2–1:4 R:R with a hold time of 4 hours – 5 days. On EUR/NZD, the 110-pip daily range gives you enough room to hit these targets during the right session.
Is pullback / retracement good for beginners?+
Yes. Pullback / Retracement is one of the more beginner-friendly strategies. The rules are clear, the setups are visual, and the risk management is straightforward. EUR/NZD is a solid pair to practice it on.

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