EVAC (EQV Ventures Acquisition Corp. II)

Fibonacci Retracement Levels

Fibonacci retracement levels for EVAC are drawn from its 52-week swing high and low. They mark price zones a large number of traders watch, which is why they sometimes act as soft support or resistance — a self-fulfilling coordination effect, not a predictive signal. Use them as a reference for framing pullbacks, not as a standalone reason to trade.

Market data may be delayed, incomplete, or inaccurate. Not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Verify quotes with your broker before trading. See Terms §17.

EVAC — 52-Week Fibonacci Levels (as of 2026-07-17)
Last Price
$10.22
52-Wk High
$10.23
2026-07-02
52-Wk Low
$9.90
2025-08-22
Nearest Level
0%
97.0% up the range
RetracementPriceDistance from Last
0% (swing high) $10.23 +0.01
23.6% $10.15 -0.07
38.2% $10.10 -0.12
50% $10.07 -0.15
61.8% $10.03 -0.19
78.6% $9.97 -0.25
100% (swing low) $9.90 -0.32
Shorter-Window Swings

The same levels over tighter lookbacks. Anchors update as new highs and lows print, so shorter windows react faster to recent price action.

WindowHighLow38.2%50%61.8%
52-Week $10.23 $9.90 $10.10$10.07$10.03
6-Month $10.23 $10.00 $10.14$10.12$10.09
3-Month $10.23 $10.11 $10.18$10.17$10.16
EVAC Fibonacci FAQ
What is the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level for EVAC?
Using EVAC's 52-week swing high of $10.23 and swing low of $9.9, the 61.8% retracement level sits at $10.03.
What are the Fibonacci retracement levels for EVAC?
Measured from EVAC's 52-week high ($10.23) to its 52-week low ($9.9), the key retracement levels are 23.6% at $10.15, 38.2% at $10.1, 50% at $10.07, 61.8% at $10.03, 78.6% at $9.97.
Where is EVAC trading relative to its Fibonacci levels?
EVAC last traded at $10.22, about 97.0% up through its 52-week range, nearest the 0% level ($10.23).
How to read these levels

Fibonacci retracements divide the move between a swing high and a swing low into the ratios 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8% and 78.6%. Traders watch them as candidate areas where a pullback might pause. On this page the anchors are EVAC's highest high and lowest low over each window, so the levels shift as new extremes print.

Two honest caveats. First, the ratios have no proven predictive power on their own — rigorous tests generally can't distinguish a Fibonacci level from any other price drawn from the same range. They tend to "work" mainly because enough participants place orders around them (a coordination effect), and 50% isn't even a Fibonacci number. Second, the level that matters is one that lines up with something structural — a prior swing, a moving average, or heavy volume. Treat these as a framing reference, not a trade signal.

Want the levels drawn on a live chart with adjustable lookbacks? Toggle Fibonacci Retracement under Indicators → Drawing Tools on the EVAC full quote page.