What Is A Candlestick
What Is A Candlestick
What Is A Candlestick
The wick, or shadow, that indicates the intra-day high and low
Over time, individual candlesticks form patterns that traders can use
to recognise major support and resistance levels. There are a great
many candlestick patterns that indicate an opportunity within a
market – some provide insight into the balance between buying and
selling pressures, while others identify continuation patterns or
market indecision.
Before you start trading, it’s important to familiarise yourself with the
basics of candlestick patterns and how they can inform your
decisions.
Hammer
The hammer candlestick pattern is formed of a short body with a
long lower wick, and is found at the bottom of a downward trend.
Though the second day opens lower than the first, the bullish
market pushes the price up, culminating in an obvious win for
buyers.
Piercing line
The piercing line is also a two-stick pattern, made up of a long red
candle, followed by a long green candle.
It signals that the selling pressure of the first day is subsiding, and a
bull market is on the horizon.
Hanging man
The hanging man is the bearish equivalent of a hammer; it has the
same shape but forms at the end of an uptrend.
It indicates that there was a significant sell-off during the day, but
that buyers were able to push the price up again. The large sell-off
is often seen as an indication that the bulls are losing control of the
market.
Shooting star
The shooting star is the same shape as the inverted hammer, but is
formed in an uptrend: it has a small lower body, and a long upper
wick.
Usually, the market will gap slightly higher on opening and rally to
an intra-day high before closing at a price just above the open – like
a star falling to the ground.
Bearish engulfing
A bearish engulfing pattern occurs at the end of an uptrend. The
first candle has a small green body that is engulfed by a
subsequent long red candle.
Evening star
The evening star is a three-candlestick pattern that is the equivalent
of the bullish morning star. It is formed of a short candle
sandwiched between a long green candle and a large red
candlestick.
It signals that the bears have taken over the session, pushing the
price sharply lower. If the wicks of the candles are short it suggests
that the downtrend was extremely decisive.
Four continuation candlestick patterns
If a candlestick pattern doesn’t indicate a change in market
direction, it is what is known as a continuation pattern. These can
help traders to identify a period of rest in the market, when there is
market indecision or neutral price movement.
Doji
When a market’s open and close are almost at the same price
point, the candlestick resembles a cross or plus sign – traders
should look out for a short to non-existent body, with wicks of
varying length.
On its own the spinning top is a relatively benign signal, but they
can be interpreted as a sign of things to come as it signifies that the
current market pressure is losing control.