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Candlestick chart tops and bottoms are an essential part of strategies for trading trend reversals. However, there are certain nuances to all candlestick charts, learning which can help improve the accuracy of technical analysis and prevent false positives. Here’s what you need to know to trade trend reversals using tops and bottoms.
Tops arise in an uptrend, when the market is ready for a reversal. Tops are popularly used to exit long positions or enter short ones.
Bottoms occur during a downtrend. Bottom candlestick chart patterns precede a bullish reversal. Traders use them as signals to take long positions or exit short ones.
Identifying a trend reversal requires careful attention to the sizes of candlesticks, and the open, close, high and low points for the candlestick duration. Here’s what you need to know about popular candlestick reversal patterns.
A tweezer pattern arises when two different candles (a bearish and a bullish one) occur consecutively with similar highs (in an uptrend) or similar lows (in a downtrend). The two-candlestick pattern makes paying attention to details a little challenging. However, learning to read them is important to grab trading opportunities in time.
Image Source: Elemental Markets
Tweezer Top
A Tweezer top is a bearish pattern that signals the reversal of an uptrend.
The top here is the resistance level, and the pattern is confirmed, with the following bearish candlesticks with the price making lower lows.
Tweezer Bottom
The tweezer bottom is the opposite of the tweezer top. It appears in a downtrend indicating a bullish reversal.
The following green candlesticks with higher lows and highs confirm the uptrend.
Double tops and double bottoms are multi-candlestick chart patterns. These patterns take shape in about 15 or more timeframes.
Double Tops
Image Source: Elemental Markets
Double Tops, also known as “M,” is a bearish reversal pattern. It is formed when an uptrend has reached its limit and momentum starts to fade. The key to identifying the pattern is observing the lengths of the green, candlesticks with a closing price higher than the opening price, and that of the red ones, i.e., those with a closing price lower than the opening price candlestick.
A double-tops pattern begins when the price trending upwards and bounces off the resistance. It reverses once, bouncing off the support. Once again, the price bounces off the resistance level, and this time breaks down from the support marking the onset of the downtrend. Using the RSI indicator or other oscillators to mark the resistance and support can aid in identifying the double tops reversal candlestick chart.
Double Bottoms
Image Source: Elemental Markets
A double bottom occurs when a downtrend is about to reverse. It is also called a “W” candlestick pattern. Here’s how to identify it:
The “W” pattern is complete. You can take positions according to your trend-reversal trading strategy.
Head and shoulders are also a pair of multi-candlestick chart patterns for trend reversals.
Bearish Head and Shoulders
Image Source: Babypips
After a sustained uptrend, the price forms a bearish head and shoulders pattern, with the lower trendline serving as the neck.
Note that the neck is the support level here, and the peaks of the left and right shoulders indicate the resistance. The price only momentarily breaks the resistance when bulls try to overpower bears and sustain the trend for longer.
Image Source: Babypips
Bullish Head and Shoulders is the opposite of the bearish head and shoulders, where the top trendline serves as the neck.
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