Price Action
Price Action
Price Action
PRICE ACTION:
CANDLE PATTERNS
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1.
REVERSAL
BAR
PATTERN
A
bullish
reversal
bar
pa@ern
goes
below
the
low
of
the
previous
bar
before
closing
higher.
A
bearish
reversal
bar
pa@ern
goes
above
the
high
of
the
previous
bar
before
closing
lower.
What
does
it
mean?
For
the
bullish
pa@ern,
the
market
found
support
below
the
low
of
the
previous
bar.
Not
only
that,
the
support
was
strong
enough
to
push
the
bar
to
close
higher
than
the
previous
bar.
This
is
the
rst
sign
of
a
possible
bullish
reversal.
For
the
bearish
pa@ern,
the
market
met
resistance
above
the
high
of
the
previous
bar.
Furthermore,
the
resistance
was
strong
enough
to
cause
the
current
bar
to
close
lower.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Buy
above
the
bullish
reversal
bar
in
a
uptrend
2.
Sell
below
the
bearish
reversal
bar
in
a
downtrend
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2.
KEY
REVERSAL
BAR
A
key
reversal
bar
is
a
specic
instance
of
a
reversal
bar
that
shows
clearer
signs
of
a
reversal.
A
bullish
key
reversal
bar
opens
below
the
low
of
the
previous
bar
and
closes
above
its
high.
A
bearish
key
reversal
bar
opens
above
the
high
of
the
previous
bar
and
closes
below
its
low.
By
deniNon,
key
reversal
bars
open
with
a
price
gap.
As
price
gaps
within
intraday
Nme-frames
are
rare,
most
key
reversal
bars
are
found
in
the
daily
and
above
Nme-frames.
What
does
it
mean?
A
down
gap
is
a
powerful
down
thrust.
When
the
markets
rejects
such
a
strong
bearish
move
with
certainty,
it
might
have
reversed
its
senNment
to
bullish.
On
the
other
hand,
when
a
gap
upwards
bumps
into
clear
resistance,
the
market
might
have
turned
bearish.
EssenNally,
a
key
reversal
bar
is
a
violent
display
of
strength
that
hints
at
a
change
of
market
senNment.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Buy
above
a
bullish
key
reversal
bar
(If
uncertain,
wait
for
price
to
close
above
it
before
buying.)
2.
Sell
below
a
bearish
key
reversal
bar
(If
uncertain,
wait
for
price
to
close
below
it
before
selling.)
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3. EXHAUSTION BAR
A
bullish
exhausNon
bar
opens
with
a
gap
down.
Then,
it
works
its
way
up
to
close
near
its
top.
A
bearish
exhausNon
bar
opens
with
a
gap
up
before
moving
down
to
close
as
a
bearish
bar.
In
both
cases,
the
gap
remains
unlled.
In
addiNon,
high
volume
should
occur
with
the
exhausNon
bar.
What
does
it
mean?
Its
name
explains
it
all.
It
represents
exhausNon
and
a
failed
last-ditch
a@empt.
AYer
the
bears
are
exhausted,
the
bulls
will
takeover
and
the
market
will
rise.
AYer
the
bulls
are
exhausted,
the
bears
will
take
the
market
down.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Buy
above
a
bullish
exhausNon
bar
2.
Sell
below
a
bearish
exhausNon
bar
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It
looks
like
the
nose
of
Pinocchio.
It
has
a
long
and
obvious
tail.
For
bullish
pin
bars,
the
lower
tail
take
up
most
of
the
bar.
For
bearish
pin
bars,
it
is
the
upper
tail
that
dominates.
What
does
it
mean?
Paraphrasing
MarNn
Pring,
the
pin
bar
lies
like
Pinocchio.
With
its
long
tail,
a
pin
bar
breaks
a
support
or
resistance
momentarily
to
trick
traders
into
entering
the
wrong
direcNon.
These
traders
are
trapped,
and
there
is
always
money
to
be
made
when
you
nd
trapped
traders.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Buy
above
a
bullish
pin
bar
that
is
rejected
from
support
level
2.
Sell
below
a
bearish
pin
bar
that
is
rejected
from
a
resistance
level
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5. TWO-BAR REVERSAL
The
two-bar
reversal
pa@ern
is
made
up
of
two
strong
bars
closing
in
opposite
direcNon.
The
bullish
variant
consists
of
a
strong
bearish
bar
followed
by
a
bullish
bar.
Reverse
the
order
to
get
its
bearish
counterpart.
What
does
it
mean?
Every
reversal
pa@ern
works
on
the
same
premise.
A
clear
rejecNon
of
a
down
thrust
is
a
bullish
reversal,
and
a
clear
rejecNon
of
an
up
thrust
is
a
bearish
reversal.
In
this
case,
the
rst
bar
represents
the
rst
thrust,
and
the
second
bar
represents
its
rejecNon.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
For
bullish
reversals,
buy
above
the
highest
point
of
the
two-bar
pa@ern.
2.
For
bearish
reversals,
sell
below
the
lowest
point
of
the
two-bar
pa@ern.
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6. THREE-BAR REVERSAL
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7. THREE-BAR PULLBACK
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8. INSIDE BAR
An
inside
bar
must
stay
completely
within
the
range
of
the
bar
immediately
before
it.
In
other
words,
the
second
bar
must
have
a
lower
high
and
a
higher
low.
What
does
it
mean?
An
inside
bar
is
a
momentary
contracNon
in
price
range/volaNlity.
Within
the
same
unit
Nme,
the
market
covers
less
ground
and
stays
completely
within
the
range
of
the
previous
bar.
It
is
a
pause
in
price
acNon
and
does
not
show
clear
strength
in
either
direcNon.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Place
bracket
orders
around
it
to
trade
its
break-out
in
either
direcNon.
(A
buy
stop
order
above
its
high,
and
a
sell
stop
order
below
its
low.
Once
one
order
is
triggered,
cancel
the
other.)
2.
Place
only
one
order
(buy
or
sell)
according
to
the
market
trend.
3.
Wait
for
a
break-out
of
the
inside
bar
and
trade
its
failure.
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9. OUTSIDE BAR
An
outside
bar
pa@ern
is
the
polar
opposite
of
an
inside
bar.
Its
range
must
exceed
that
of
the
previous
bar
with
a
higher
high
and
a
lower
low.
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10. NR7
This
bar
pa@ern
requires
seven
bars.
If
the
last
bar
has
the
smallest
bar
range
within
the
sequence,
it
is
a
NR7
pa@ern.
To
clarify,
bar
range
refers
to
the
dierence
between
the
high
and
the
low
of
a
bar.
What
does
it
mean?
Like
the
inside
bar,
it
indicates
decreasing
volaNlity.
As
the
lower
volaNlity
comes
within
the
context
of
seven
bars,
instead
of
a
single
bar
like
in
the
case
of
an
inside
bar,
the
NR7
pa@ern
is
a
stronger
sign
of
decreasing
volaNlity.
However,
while
the
inside
bar
shows
no
strength
in
either
direcNons,
the
NR7
pa@ern
might
driY
upwards
or
downwards.
In
such
cases,
the
NR7
represents
a
price
thrust
with
decreasing
volaNlity.
As
the
market
alternates
between
range
contracNon
and
range
expansion,
the
NR7
alerts
us
to
standby
for
explosive
moves.
How
do
we
trade
it?
1.
Buy
break-out
of
the
high
of
the
last
bar
if
the
trend
is
up
2.
Sell
break-out
of
the
low
of
the
last
bar
if
the
trend
is
down