Training Course Material 02 CandleSticks
Training Course Material 02 CandleSticks
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What is Candlestick?
Candlesticks is a chart type plotted using Open, High, Low & Closing Price
High
High
Close
Open
Open
Close
Low
Positive Close
Low
Negative Close
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Why Candlesticks?
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Candlesticks with a long upper shadow, long lower shadow and small body
This formation is called as spinning top representing indecision
Neither buyers nor sellers could win and the result was a standoff
After a long advance or long white candlestick, a spinning top indicates
weakness among the bulls and a potential change or interruption in trend.
After a long decline or long black candlestick, a spinning top indicates
weakness among the bears and a potential change or interruption in trend.
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Candlesticks with a small upper and lower shadow with small body
This formation is called as Doji representing Neutral pattern
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Bullish / Bearish
Marubozo
Indecision
Reversal
Doji
Dragonfly Doji
Hammer
Gravestone Doji:
Inverted Hammer
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Piercing Line
Engulfing Pattern:
A reversal pattern that can be bearish or bullish, depending upon whether it appears at the
end of an uptrend (bearish engulfing pattern) or a downtrend (bullish engulfing pattern). The
first day is characterized by a small body, followed by a day whose body completely engulfs
the previous day's body
Piercing Line:
A bullish two day reversal pattern. The first day, in a downtrend, is a long black day. The next
day opens at a new low, then closes above the midpoint of the body of the first day.
Three White Soldiers:
A bullish reversal pattern consisting of three consecutive white bodiesEach should open
within the previous body and the close should be near the high of the day.
versal pattern. The first day, in a downtrend, is a long black day. The next
low, then closes above the midpoint of the body of the first day.
Shooting Star:
A single day pattern that can appear in an uptrend. It opens higher, trades much higher, then closes near
its open. It looks just like the Inverted Hammer except that it is bearish.
Evening Star:
A bearish reversal pattern that continues an uptrend with a long white body day followed by a gapped up
small body day, then a black candle closing below the midpoint of the first day.
Morning Star:
A three day bullish reversal pattern consisting of three candlesticks - a long-bodied black candle extending
the current downtrend, a short middle candle that gapped down on the open, and a long-bodied white
candle that gapped up on the open and closed above the midpoint of the body of the first day.
Abandoned Baby
Reversal pattern with a gap up/down Doji followed by followed by another gap in the opposite direction. The
shadows on the Doji must completely gap below or above the shadows of the first and third day.
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Hammer:
Hammer candlesticks form when a security moves significantly lower after the
open, but rallies to close well above the intraday low. If this candlestick forms
during an advance, then it is called a Hanging Man.
Hanging Man:
Hanging Man candlesticks form when a security moves significantly lower after
the open, but rallies to close well above the intraday low. If this candlestick forms
during a decline, then it is called a Hammer.
Inverted Hammer:
A one day bullish reversal pattern. In a downtrend, the open is lower, then it
trades higher, but closes near its open, therefore looking like an inverted hammer
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Harami:
A two day pattern that has a small body day completely contained within the
range of the previous body, and is the opposite color.
Harami Cross:
A two day pattern similar to the Harami. The difference is that the last day is a
Doji.
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Merging Candlesticks
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Candlesticks do not reflect the sequence of events between the open and
close
The high and the low are obvious and indisputable, but candlesticks (and
bar charts) cannot tell us which came first.
Example
The first sequence shows two small moves and one large move: a small
decline off the open to form the low, a sharp advance to form the high, and
a small decline to form the close.
The second sequence shows three rather sharp moves: a sharp advance
off the open to form the high, a sharp decline to form the low, and a sharp
advance to form the close.
The first sequence portrays strong, sustained buying pressure, and would
be considered more bullish.
The second sequence reflects more volatility and some selling pressure. 20
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Moving Averages
Buy & Sell signals, Support & Resistance levels, Trend direction
Chart Patterns
Candlesticks charts
To learn about