When a trade moves against you, the immediate retail reflex is to panic and close the position at a loss. I don't panic. I calculate. You can exit a losing position at break-even if you understand the geometry of coordinates and the Average Load Price. This calculated escape is built on simple math, not hope.
If you hold a losing position, you can open additional positions at more favorable coordinate levels. This shifts your average load price. The new break-even point is the weighted average of the entry prices:
BEP = Sum(Entry Price * Lot Size) / Sum(Lot Size)
To execute this strategy safely, you must calculate the location of the BEP relative to the boundaries of the Price Cloud. If the BEP is placed in a high-density region, the coordinates are highly likely to visit that level during the next oscillation, allowing you to exit the entire block of positions without a loss.
Stop guessing where price will turn. Use Plane A and Plane B coordinates to measure the distance to the nearest exclusion zone. By placing your additional orders close to these boundaries, you ensure that the average load price is pulled as close to the current price as possible.
This spatial recovery method replaces panic with calculation. You are no longer hoping for a trend reversal. You are using the geometric oscillations of the system to escape unfavorable states. Either you calculate your exit or you take the loss. It is that simple.
Related reading: Break-Even Point: Escaping a Losing Trade