The concept of 50% price filling on a weekly candle within a consolidation area relates to the common technical analysis practice of looking for a midpoint retracement before a potential breakout. When an asset's price enters a consolidation phase on the weekly chart—meaning it's trading sideways within a defined high and low (often forming patterns like rectangles or triangles)—traders view the 50% level of that range (the distance from the high to the low) as a key point of equilibrium or balance between buyers and sellers. This level, which is a psychological point often included in the Fibonacci retracement tool despite not being a true Fibonacci ratio, can act as a magnet where price action is likely to 'fill' or return to before initiating the next major move. Therefore, a weekly candle's wick or body penetrating and reversing at this 50% level suggests a rebalancing of orders and offers a high-probability zone for traders to anticipate either a continuation of the prior trend or a strong breakout from the consolidation range.
Consolidation area

Identifying Consolidation and Key Levels
Consolidation Area: The broader charts show the price of Gold Spot (XAUUSD) entering a period of sideways trading, characterized by alternating weekly bullish (green) and bearish (red) candles, often within a defined high and low range. This area represents a balance or indecision between supply and demand.
Key Candle/Range: The concept then focuses on a specific high-momentum candle (e.g., the Nov 2nd Week Candle) or the entire range of the consolidation to establish the boundaries for the analysis.
The 50% Level: The critical level is the 50% retracement (or midpoint) of this chosen range. This level is considered the Equilibrium (EQ) point, where buyers and sellers are perfectly balanced.
Example

On this chart, we see:
Each weekly candle dipped into the midpoint of the one before it,
Created reaction,
And built a foundation for continuation.
As long as the market keeps holding above the 50% zone, the structure remains intact and biased toward continuation.
During consolidation phases, the market often displays a repetitive behaviour:
each weekly candle tends to retrace and fill approximately 50% of the previous week’s candle before continuing in either direction.
This happens because the midpoint of a strong weekly candle is a fair value zone, where:
liquidity is gathered,
trapped orders are resolved,
and the market achieves balance before the next move.
How the Chart Demonstrates This
November 2nd week candle
A large bullish candle created a strong move upward.
This left an imbalance in price.
The midpoint of this candle sits around 4,122.
Following weeks
Price entered consolidation.
Each weekly candle retraced into the 50% zone of the previous week’s candle.
When price reached the midpoint, buyers stepped in again, causing a bounce.
Repeat Structure
This pattern repeated across the next candles:
wick down → fill midpoint → rejection → continuation
Showing a rhythmic behaviour characteristic of consolidation:
Slow pullback
Midpoint fill
Reaction
Next candle repeats
Current Candle
Again moved back into the midpoint zone, confirming the same behaviour.
Holding above the 50% level maintains a bullish continuation structure.
Why This Happens
The 50% zone of a strong candle is often where:
-institutions reload
-pending orders sit
-imbalances are corrected
This zone is neither expensive nor cheap — it’s fair value.
So, during sideways phases, price frequently returns there to:
✔ collect liquidity
✔ balance the market
✔ establish support or resistance
Before the next directional move occurs.
Key Takeaway
In consolidation, the market does not trend strongly.
Instead, it oscillates around the previous candle’s midpoint.
Consolidation area
Identifying Consolidation and Key Levels
Consolidation Area: The broader charts show the price of Gold Spot (XAUUSD) entering a period of sideways trading, characterized by alternating weekly bullish (green) and bearish (red) candles, often within a defined high and low range. This area represents a balance or indecision between supply and demand.
Key Candle/Range: The concept then focuses on a specific high-momentum candle (e.g., the Nov 2nd Week Candle) or the entire range of the consolidation to establish the boundaries for the analysis.
The 50% Level: The critical level is the 50% retracement (or midpoint) of this chosen range. This level is considered the Equilibrium (EQ) point, where buyers and sellers are perfectly balanced.
Example
On this chart, we see:
Each weekly candle dipped into the midpoint of the one before it,
Created reaction,
And built a foundation for continuation.
As long as the market keeps holding above the 50% zone, the structure remains intact and biased toward continuation.
During consolidation phases, the market often displays a repetitive behaviour:
each weekly candle tends to retrace and fill approximately 50% of the previous week’s candle before continuing in either direction.
This happens because the midpoint of a strong weekly candle is a fair value zone, where:
liquidity is gathered,
trapped orders are resolved,
and the market achieves balance before the next move.
How the Chart Demonstrates This
November 2nd week candle
A large bullish candle created a strong move upward.
This left an imbalance in price.
The midpoint of this candle sits around 4,122.
Following weeks
Price entered consolidation.
Each weekly candle retraced into the 50% zone of the previous week’s candle.
When price reached the midpoint, buyers stepped in again, causing a bounce.
Repeat Structure
This pattern repeated across the next candles:
wick down → fill midpoint → rejection → continuation
Showing a rhythmic behaviour characteristic of consolidation:
Slow pullback
Midpoint fill
Reaction
Next candle repeats
Current Candle
Again moved back into the midpoint zone, confirming the same behaviour.
Holding above the 50% level maintains a bullish continuation structure.
Why This Happens
The 50% zone of a strong candle is often where:
-institutions reload
-pending orders sit
-imbalances are corrected
This zone is neither expensive nor cheap — it’s fair value.
So, during sideways phases, price frequently returns there to:
✔ collect liquidity
✔ balance the market
✔ establish support or resistance
Before the next directional move occurs.
Key Takeaway
In consolidation, the market does not trend strongly.
Instead, it oscillates around the previous candle’s midpoint.
©warroomxyz
t.me/warroomxyz
t.me/warroomxyz
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
©warroomxyz
t.me/warroomxyz
t.me/warroomxyz
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
