Candlestick PatternsReversal and continuation signals

Module 16: Candlestick Patterns

Key Takeaways

  • Single and multi-candle patterns reveal shifts in momentum.
  • Location matters: patterns at key S/R are far more reliable.
  • Always wait for confirmation from the next candle.

Doji

Open and close are nearly equal — a tiny body with wicks. Signals indecision; potential reversal when it appears at a strong level.

Hammer

A small body with a long lower wick at the bottom of a downtrend. Buyers rejected lower prices — a bullish reversal signal.

Hanging man

Looks like a hammer but appears at the top of an uptrend — a bearish warning that sellers are testing.

Shooting star

A small body with a long upper wick after an uptrend. Buyers pushed up but were rejected — bearish reversal.

Engulfing

A two-candle pattern where the second body completely engulfs the first. A bullish engulfing at support is a strong buy signal; a bearish engulfing at resistance is a strong sell signal.

Morning star

A three-candle bullish reversal: a big bearish candle, a small indecision candle, then a big bullish candle. Marks a bottom.

Evening star

The bearish mirror at a top: big bullish, small indecision, big bearish candle.

Three white soldiers

Three consecutive strong bullish candles — powerful bullish momentum, often after a bottom.

Three black crows

Three consecutive strong bearish candles — powerful bearish momentum, often after a top.

✅ Tip

A candlestick pattern at a major support/resistance with confluence (e.g. RSI divergence) is worth far more than the same pattern in the middle of nowhere.

Frequently Asked Questions

Master a handful (engulfing, hammer, shooting star, doji) used at key levels rather than memorising dozens.

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