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Some candlesticks stand alone and have a specific meaning, while
others need to be interpreted in the context of the other candlesticks
that come before or after — specific combinations. Stand-alone
candlesticks that we see often in Forex are the doji, spinning top, and
hammer or hanging man.
There are far more patterns of multiple candlesticks than there are
stand-alone candles with high meaning. Specific combinations include the
star formations, engulfing bull or engulfing bear, the harami, evening
and morning stars, three white soldiers or three black crows, tweezers
bottom or top, and many others. In total, there are over 100 candlestick
patterns, but if you learn just a handful, they will help your
understanding of market sentiment. Many people believe that candlestick
patterns excel in identifying reversal points, and in Forex so many
people agree with this view that you do yourself a disservice if you do
not learn at least some of the key patterns.
Stand-Alone Candlesticks
A special version of the candlestick is the doji. The open
and close are so close together that the real body is just a line. The
high and low project off the top and bottom, but the main action — the
range between open and close — is minimal. A doji looks like a "+" sign.
A doji means buyers may have tried to get the price higher during the
course of the trading session but they could not get it to close
higher. Similarly, sellers may be gotten a lower price during the
session, as shown by the lower shadow, but they could not get it to
close lower. The day’s trading action was a standoff between bulls and
bears — nobody won. The appearance of a doji — or worse, a series of
dojis — means the market is paralyzed by indecision. It needs a new
factor to trade on, and when that factor appears, the price will deliver
a breakout.
A doji candlestick
When the doji has an exceptionally long lower shadow, meaning the
open and close are the same near the top of the lower shadow, it is
named a dragonfly. A dragonfly coming after a series of lower
closes may mean the downmove is ending — bears could not get the close
under the open. When the long shadow is the upper one, meaning the open
and close are the same at the bottom of the bar, it is named a gravestone.
In Forex, a gravestone candle that shows up in an upmove is a sign the
bulls could not get the close above the open in that period — watch out.
A dragonfly candlestick
A gravestone candlestick
The spinning top is a candlestick in which the upper and lower
shadows are taller than the real body. A little reflection shows why
this is a sign of indecisiveness, like the doji — traders put in a
significant high but could not get the currency to close there, and also
a significant low but couldn’t get it to close there.
A spinning top candlestick
A series of dojis or spinning tops with the closes not far from one
another is a danger sign — the market is range-trading and needs a
catalyst for a breakout.
A hammer has a long lower shadow, meaning the price moved
lower after the open but then rallied to close nearer to the open but
still below it. That means it is a black or filled candlestick, and if
it comes after a series of falling candles, it is a continuation
pattern. If it comes after a series of rising candles, it is bearish and
named a hanging man, since it signals the possible end of the
rise. We might say that the hammer does not really stand alone, but you
will see it as stand-alone at first and then realize you need to look at
what precedes it.
A hammer candlestick
A hanging man candlestick
Combination Patterns
A star candlestick is one that stands apart from the
preceding candle – separated by a gap. A gap always reflects special
circumstances, especially in Forex, where the market is hardly ever
closed.
Fresh news has come out or some event has occurred to shock
prices into a gap higher or lower. Stars come in various forms, but
always have a small real body — implying that while the gap may have
meaning, the market remains at least a little uncertain. The candlestick
term for a gap is a rising (or falling) window, a suggestive
name. If the star is a white candle on a rising window following an
upmove, it often means the price rise is ending. This seems
counterintuitive at first but not if you think of the gap as a last
gasp. The next candle will likely be black and it may well “close the
gap.” Engulfing candles are the opposite of dojis — they have long
real bodies, so long that the open and close both surpass the open and
close of the preceding bar. As in all bars, the bigger the candle, the
more trading action occurred during the period.
A bullish engulfing
candle started out with an open below the bottom of the body the day
before, and closed over the top of the body the day before — lots of
action, and ending positively. The bearish engulfing candlestick is
black and started the period above the top of the real body of the
candle the period before — but then crashed, closing below the real body
of the candle before. The relatively bigger size of the real body
“engulfs” the candle of the period before and means strong sentiment.
Both bullish and bearish engulfing candlesticks are seen in Forex and
they are reliable more than half the time.
A bullish engulfing candlestick pattern
A bearish engulfing candlestick pattern
One pattern that tends not to be reliable in Forex is three white soldier and three black crows. These are three very large candles in a row. Conventional interpretation would have it that the 4th
bar will also be higher (or lower), but that tends not to be the case
in Forex.
The next high or low may continue the trend, but not
necessarily the close. This is one of many instances when it pays to
combine candlesticks with other indicators, especially momentum, relative strength, and MACD.