Profitable Candlestick Patterns
Profitable Candlestick Patterns
Profitable Candlestick Patterns
When these candlesticks form at support and resistance levels or Fibonacci levels
they are great trade entry signals.
1. The doji cross can be both considered a bullish or bearish signal depending on
where it forms.
2. The gravestone doji is considered a bearish reversal candlestick when formed
in an uptrend or in a resistance level.
3. The dragonfly doji is considered a bullish candlestick pattern when formed in
a downtrend or in a support level.
4. The long-legged doji shows a period of indecision by bulls and bears and
depending on where it forms (uptrend/resistance level=bearish signal,
downtrend/support level=bullish signal) it can be considered a bearish or
bullish signal.
The easiest way to remember the harami patterns is to think about a pregnant
woman and a baby inside her tummy:
When you see the dark cloud cover candlestick pattern in an uptrend or in level
of resistance, its a bearish reversal signal and you should be thinking to go short
(sell).
The piercing line is the opposite of dark cloud cover. You may see
this in a downtrend or forming at a support level. The first candlestick is very bearish
and when the 2nd candle forms, it tells a completely different story, its bullish. This
tells you that the bears are losing steam and that the bulls are gaining strength to
potentially move the market price up.
The second bullish candlestick should close somewhere up the mind-point of the first
candlestick.
So when you see the piercing line pattern forming at support levels or in a downtrend
market, take note as this is a potential bullish reversal signal so you should be
thinking of going long (buying).
The shooting star is single candlestick pattern and when it forms in an uptrend or in
a resistance level, then it is considered as a bearish reversal pattern and so you
should be looking to sell.
Note: the shooting star is sometimes called the bearish hammer, inverse hammer,
inverted hammer or bearish pin bar. They all mean the same and refer to the
shooting star candlestick pattern.
It has a very long tail and a short upper wick or none at all.
Now, the hanging man, is exactly like hammer but the only difference is that it must
form in an uptrend.
When it forms in an uptrend or in resistance levels, it tells you that there is a
possibility that the uptrend is ending so you should be looking to go short (sell). See
chart below:
1. For a bearish railway track, the first candle is bullish followed by almost
exactly the same length and body of the second candlestick which is bullish.
This tells you that bulls are losing ground and bears have gained controlled.
So when you see the bearish railway track pattern in an uptrend, or in an area of
resistance, this is a signal that the downtrend may be starting so you should be
looking to sell.
1. Similarly but opposite is the bullish railway track pattern. When you see this
in a downtred or in an area of support, take note because the market may be
heading up and this is your signal to buy.
Let me explain. If you see are bearish spinning top in a support area or in a
downtrend, this can be considered a bullish reversal signal when the high of tha
bearish spinning top is broken to the upside.
Another notable feature of spinning tops is that the wicks on both sides should be
almost the same length.
When I see spinning tops form on support or resistance levels, all it tells me the bears
and bulls do not really know where to push the market and so when a breakout of the
low or high of a spinning top by the next candle that forms usually signals the move
in that direction of breakout!
Heres an example:
Blending Candlesticks-A Concept Every
Trader Needs To Know
This is a technique where not many traders are aware about and I will just give you a
simple example so you understand this concept better.
To give you a bit of context, if you are a forex trader and you are using the metrader4
trading platform, it got only 9 timeframes where your charts can be viewed in which
are the 1m, 5min, 15m, 30min, 1hr, 4hr, daily, weekly & monthly timeframes
as shown on the chart below:
You may see a hammer in the 1hr timeframe but remember that that 1hr timeframe
has two-30minute candles to make 1 hr, right? Yes.
So what do you think the candlestick pattern would be in the two-30 minute
candlesticks to give you a bullish hammer candlestick pattern in the 1hr timeframe?
Or if you see a shooting start bearish candlestick in the 1hr timeframe, what do you
think would be the candlestick pattern in the two-30minute candlesticks that gave
that 1hr candlestick a shooting star?
So lets say you are a trader that loves to trade only hammers and shooting stars and
you are waiting buy at a major support line in the 1hr timeframe.
Youve been waiting patiently for a bullish hammer candlestick pattern to form to
give you the signal to buy .But unfortunately, no hammer forms in the 1hr timeframe
and even though you see a bullish engulfing pattern formed, you did not enter a buy
trade.
You just watched as price shoots up and you wished you could have bought at the
bullish engulfing signal that was given but you are only interested in trading
hammers.
Well, if there was a 2hr time frame in metrader4, you could have switched to it and
seen a very bullish hammer and you could have taken the trade but because you did
not understand the concept of blending candlesticks you missed a very good trade!!!
Notice also that a piercing line pattern when blended forms a hammer.