Candlestick patterns
Information is not investment advice
There are a lot of different candlestick patterns. When traders recognize these patterns on the chart, they act accordingly. As a result, the probability that a certain price action will follow a specific pattern is high.
Traders examine candlestick patterns through the visual analysis of the charts. There are also different pattern recognition indicators for MetaTrader. You can install them in your trading software. Still, even if an indicator or an expert advisor highlights the patterns on the charts for you, you will need to know what each pattern means.
There are two main types of candlestick patterns: reversal patterns and continuation patterns. As it’s evident from these names, they show the likely further direction of the market relative to the previous price action.
Reversal patterns
Reversal patterns indicate the high odds that a trend will change direction or make a deep correction. These patterns help to identify possible entry points at the beginning of the new trend or a big counter-trend move.
Not every reversal pattern has a similar weight. It’s very important where such a pattern took place and what happened before it. The reversal signal is strong in 2 cases:
- When the preceding trend is strong and steep.
- If a reversal candlestick pattern occurs near the strong resistance/support level.
In the picture below you can see an example of a strong reversal signal: the reversal candlestick pattern formed after a strong uptrend.
Continuation patterns
Continuation patterns suggest that the market will maintain an existing trend after a pause. These patterns help to find a new entry point in line with a trend, as well as provide evidence for holding the already open positions or adding to them.
Notice that reversal patterns are easier to recognize than the continuation ones. As a result, for beginner traders, we recommend starting learning the patterns from the reversal ones.
It’s also possible to break the candlestick patterns into bullish and bearish ones. In most cases, they represent the mirror images of each other.
In the following tutorials, we explain the most popular reversal and continuation candlestick patterns.
2024-10-10 • Updated
Other articles in this section
- Fibonacci fan
- Fibonacci expansion
- How to Use Fibonacci Retracements
- Reversal candlestick patterns
- Continuation candlestick patterns
- How to deal with market noise?
- How to backtest a trading strategy
- Gator Oscillator
- Awesome Oscillator
- Ranges
- Alligator indicator
- Bill Williams theory
- Fractals
- Chart patterns
- Uncovering Gann indicators
- How to create your own trading strategy?
- Trend trading
- Carry trade
- Swing trading
- Position trading
- Day trading
- Scalping
- Trading styles
- Fibonacci tools
- Trader's psychology
- How to identify market reversal
- Japanese Candlesticks
- Trends
- Market conditions and phases