Last updated: June 11, 2026

I Tested 300 Pivot Point Strategies on NASDAQ. Here's the Winner.

I just tested almost 300 different pivot point strategies on E-mini NASDAQ, and the results are genuinely encouraging. Pivot points are one of the oldest tools in trading, invented by pit traders before screens existed, and they still work surprisingly well. But there is one variable almost nobody tests that completely changes which pivot performs best. Here is the full study, the data, and the single configuration that came out on top.

What Are Pivot Points (and Why They Still Work)

A pivot point is a simple yet powerful calculation invented by pit traders, back when trading meant shouting at each other on the floor rather than clicking a mouse. The maths is trivial. You take the prior day's high, the prior day's low, and the prior day's close, add them together, and divide by three. That gives you the floor pivot point, a single level that is supposed to show where important support or resistance will sit for the next trading session.

On top of that central pivot, you can project resistance and support lines. Take the previous high or low as a standalone value, multiply it by two, then add it to or subtract it from the floor pivot. That gives you three projected lines for the next day, each suggesting where the next meaningful support or resistance level should appear in actual trading.

And here is the thing: visually, it holds up. It is not mind blowing, but you have to give it credit. When a pivot is well calibrated, the projections can be genuinely accurate, marking out resistance and support that price respects the next day. That makes pivot points a solid foundation for viable breakout strategies, which is exactly what this test set out to confirm.

The Variable Almost Nobody Tests: Session Boundary Time

Here is the essential question. When you calibrate a pivot from "the previous day," how do you decide where the old day ends and the new day begins? Most traders default to midnight, which is logical enough. But for the E-mini NASDAQ, the actual end of the regular session is 4 p.m. So technically you could use 4 p.m. as the boundary, and that should give you a cleaner projection for the next session.

When you calibrate it that way, the projections can get even sharper. The right boundary depends on the market, but the principle is universal: the time you choose to slice one session from the next directly shapes where your pivot lines land.

So why stop at midnight or 4 p.m.? If you can set the boundary at any time, why not try midday, when activity slows? Why not pre-market, or other hours entirely? By artificially creating new session starts and endings at different boundary times, you generate a whole family of pivot points, and some of them turn out to be far more predictive than the default. That is the idea this test was built to explore.

How I Structured the Test: 288 Strategies, ~10,500 Iterations

I ran the entire study inside BreakoutOS, using 60-minute E-mini NASDAQ data with the most recent few years held back for out-of-sample validation. Every strategy was built on the proven Mr. Breakout's formula from the bestselling book The Breakout Trading Revolution: take a point of initiation, add space as a multiple of Average True Range, define a time window for entries, and go long once price crosses that threshold.

For the point of initiation, I used a built-in pivot peg preset that calculates pivots on a boundary every three hours through the day. Here is how the test space broke down:

Multiply 8 boundaries by 3 lines by 3 ATR periods by 4 session windows and you land at roughly 288 distinct breakout strategies. Each was then tested across 25 multiplier values, which works out to about 10,500 individual iterations. Every strategy was a day trading model, with the exit set to 11 p.m. the same day. I prefer to be flat before midnight, and 11 p.m. has consistently worked better for me than the midnight cutoff.

On TradeStation a sweep like this would take a long time. In BreakoutOS the whole prototype built in seconds, in a web browser, even while recording. That speed is what makes it practical to ask a question this broad in the first place.

First Pass: Which Session Boundary Wins on Raw Results?

With the prototypes built, the first question is simple: looking purely at raw results, which point of initiation performs best? The answer was the midnight pivot. Midday came in second, and 3 p.m. (the early close of the stock session) came in third.

Rank Session Boundary Why It Makes Sense
1 Midnight The conventional day boundary
2 Midday A natural midpoint where activity shifts
3 3 p.m. Early close of the regular stock session

There is a reassuring pattern here. The top three boundaries are all logically explainable points in the trading day, not random hours that happened to curve-fit the data. When the strongest results line up with times that make economic sense, that is a good early sign you are looking at a real edge rather than noise. My hunch going in was that midday would be powerful, and the raw results backed that up.

The Metric That Actually Matters: Robustness Score

Raw results are only the starting point, and they are measured on in-sample data with the most recent few years deliberately excluded so we are not chasing the latest moves. The metric I actually sort by is robustness, because it tells you whether an edge survives outside the one setting that happened to top the leaderboard.

The Breakout Space Robustness Score answers a specific question: of all the multiplier values around the best one - not just 1.4, but 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.6 and so on - how many are profitable? If almost all of them make money, the edge is broad and stable. If only the single best value works, it is probably an illusion.

And here is the surprise. Sorted by robustness, the midday pivot is the strongest of all, with almost 90 percent of its surrounding space profitable. That is an exceptionally robust pivot strategy. Midnight won on raw numbers, but midday won where it counts, which is exactly the kind of strategy I would put real money behind.

Out-of-Sample Check: Does the Midday Pivot Hold Up?

A robust in-sample result still has to prove itself on data it has never seen. The candidate to validate: the midday pivot point with space set to ATR 20 and a breakout multiplier of 1.4. Running it forward on the held-back recent years, the equity curve climbs steadily, and that is with no filter at all. These are deliberately foundational breakout models, built rock solid and unfiltered so the edge has to stand on its own before any refinement is added.

The walk-forward analysis confirmed it. Using the WFA Rank Heatmap, the 1.4 multiplier ranked number one among all tested periods, with a 62 percent robustness score. Not the highest possible, but solid. More importantly, the neighbouring values held up too:

Multiplier Walk-Forward Standing
1.4 Ranked #1, 62% robustness score, strong recent performer
1.2 Scores high, still climbing - especially lately
1.6 Slightly underperforms 1.4 but still trending up strongly

The detail that matters most is recency. The strongest signal a strategy can give you is not how it looked eight or nine years ago, when NASDAQ volatility was much lower, but how it has performed lately. The midday pivot shows excellent recency, which means deploying this configuration in current markets sets you up for a high probability of success.

See BreakoutOS in Action

Watch how traders build and test breakout strategies like this one in minutes, not weeks.

Watch the Demo

What to Take Away From This Test

Out of nearly 300 tested pivot point strategies, the verdict is clear. On index futures like the E-mini NASDAQ, and very likely on related markets such as the E-mini S&P, the midday pivot point is the standout. It is robust, it is recent, and right now anything around an ATR 20 space with a 1.4 multiplier makes for a strong, viable entry.

Two broader lessons fall out of this study. First, the session boundary time is a hugely underrated variable. Most traders never question the default midnight calculation, yet simply moving the boundary to midday produced the most robust pivot in the entire test. Second, raw performance and robustness are not the same thing. Midnight topped the leaderboard, but midday was the one worth trading, and you only see that distinction when you sort by robustness rather than by profit.

This is a foundational model, which means there is plenty of room to improve it with exits, filters, and your own ideas. But as a starting point, it is rock solid. We went looking for the truth across 288 strategies, and we found a strong, robust pivot. From here, the work is refinement, not rescue.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a pivot point in trading and how is it calculated?

A pivot point is a price level that projects likely support and resistance for the next session. The classic floor pivot is calculated by taking the prior period's high, low, and close, adding them together, and dividing by three. From that central pivot you can project additional resistance and support lines by doubling the prior high or low and adding or subtracting it from the floor pivot. It was invented by pit traders to estimate where the next session's important levels would form.

Do pivot point strategies actually work?

Yes, when used correctly. Across 288 pivot point breakout strategies tested on E-mini NASDAQ, nearly 90 percent of the multiplier settings around the best configuration were profitable. Pivot points work best as a point of initiation inside a structured breakout model rather than as a standalone signal, and performance depends heavily on which session boundary time you calculate them from.

What time should you calculate pivot points from?

The default is midnight, but that is not always optimal. In this NASDAQ test, the three best boundary times were all logically explainable: midnight produced the strongest raw results, midday came second, and 3 p.m. (close of the regular stock session) came third. On a robustness basis, the midday boundary was the strongest of all. The best time can differ market by market, so it is worth testing several rather than defaulting to midnight.

Are pivot points better for day trading or swing trading?

In this study every strategy was a day trading model on 60-minute E-mini NASDAQ data, entering intraday and exiting at 11 p.m. the same day. Pivot points are a natural fit for day trading because they project support and resistance for a single upcoming session. They can be adapted for swing trading, but the cleanest application is intraday, where one session's high, low, and close sets the levels for the next.

What is the best pivot point setting for the NASDAQ?

On E-mini NASDAQ, the most robust configuration was the midday pivot point used as the point of initiation, with space calculated as ATR period 20 and a breakout multiplier around 1.4. That multiplier ranked number one in walk-forward analysis with a 62 percent robustness score, and the neighbouring values of 1.2 and 1.6 also held up, which confirms the setting is robust rather than a single lucky number.
Tomas Nesnidal

About the Author

Tomas Nesnidal, known to the systematic trading community as Mr. Breakouts, is a breakout trading specialist, hedge fund co-founder, and creator of BreakoutOS. He has managed institutional portfolios using breakout strategies for over 15 years, trading from 65+ countries. He is the author of The Breakout Trading Revolution and co-founder of Breakout Trading Academy.