CLASS 6 Candle Sticks and Candlesticks Patterns
CLASS 6 Candle Sticks and Candlesticks Patterns
CLASS 6 Candle Sticks and Candlesticks Patterns
Overall Goals:
Class Overview
Candlestick and candlestick patterns are technical tools that have been
used for centuries and is still used by technical analyst to predict price
direction. Candlesticks build patterns that can most likely predict future
price direction once completed.
The components of candlestick charts are the opening price level, the
closing price level, the high price, and the low price of any Time frame.
Real Body: The rectangle section of the Candlestick, called the real body
is the range between the open and close. The real body represents the
overall commitment in the market.
Shadows: The thin lines extending out from the Candlestick real bodies
are called shadows and highlight the price extremes for the session.
CLASSIFICATION OF CANDLESTICKS.
The Doji
The Hammer (inverted hammer) and Hanging Man (shooting star)
Harami bullish and bearish
Bullish and Bearish Engulfing Bar
Tweezer tops and bottom
Morning and Evening Star
Three white soldiers and Three black crows
THE DOJI
A Doji candlestick is forms when the price open and close are virtually
equal for the given time period. Doji candlesticks have a very small body
(opening and closing prices of the day are almost identical), and there is
a long shadow either above or below the candlestick body.
Doji generally signals a reversal pattern for technical analysts and look
like a plus sign which usually shows indecision in the market.
Types of Doji
The Dragon fly doij is a bullish candlestick pattern that looks like a cross.
Keynotes:
A hammer has a long shadow and a small body (black or white) that is
very close to the high of the day. At the end of a downtrend, the hammer
is considered a bullish reversal signal.
Keynotes:
A hanging man has a long lower shadow and a small body and it is found
at the end of an uptrend. The hanging man is also a reversal pattern.
Keynotes:
Bearish reversal.
Must be located in an uptrend.
Hanging man Lower shadow tends to be at least twice the length of
the real body which should be at the top of candle.
Shooting star upper shadow tends to be at least twice the length of
the real body which should be at the bottom of candle.
The hanging man and the hammer are both candlestick patterns that
indicate trend reversal. The only difference between the two is the nature
of the trend in which they appear. If the pattern appears in a chart with
an upward trend indicating a bearish reversal, it is called the hanging
man. If it appears in a downward trend indicating a bullish reversal, it is
a hammer. Apart from this key difference, the patterns and their
components are identical.
Keynotes:
Tweezer patterns are reversal patterns and occur when two or more
candlesticks touch the same bottom for a tweezer bottom pattern, or when
two or more candlesticks touch the same top for a tweezer top pattern.
A tweezers top is when two candles occur back to back with very similar
highs. A tweezers topping pattern occurs when the highs of two
candlesticks occur at almost exactly the same level following an advance.
A tweezers bottom occurs when two candles, back to back, occur with
very similar lows. A tweezers bottom occurs when two candles, back to
back, occur with very similar lows.
Keynotes:
Keynotes:
Bullish reversal.
Must be located within a downtrend.
Long bearish candle appears at the end of a downtrend. The
following session has a small range and tends to gap lower. This is
followed by a bullish long candle which rallies more than 50% of
the recent bearish candle.
Keynotes:
Three black crows indicate a bearish candlestick pattern that predicts the
reversal of an uptrend. The black crow pattern consists of three
consecutive long-bodied candlesticks that have opened within the real
body of the previous candle and closed lower than the previous candle.
Keynotes:
ASSIGNMENT.