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đź’ˇ IDEAS Candlestick Charting: Perfecting The Art

It is the confirmation or denial of a trend that determines whether an investor will sit tight today and hold his or her position or decide to enter or exit an issue that could be long or short the market. Candlestick charting allows investors to focus on continuation patterns and use them to confirm or deny trends that the chartist can learn to recognize. Here, we look at candlestick charting as an art, and put aspiring investors on the path to honing their craft.

Patterns on the Bullish and Bearish Sides

In the world of Japanese candlesticks, there are a number of bullish and bearish continuation patterns. With a short list on the bullish side of the market, a chartist would look for the following patterns:

1. Mat Hold
2. Rising Three Methods
3. Separating Three Lines
4. Side-by-Side White Lines
5. Upside Gap Three Methods
6. Upside Tasuki Gap

This article focuses on rising three methods, mat hold and separating three lines.

With a short list on the bearish side of the market, one would look for the following patterns:

1. Falling Three Methods
2. In-Neck
3. On-Neck
4. Separating Lines
5. Side-by-Side White Lines
6. Black Crows

In this article, we focus on falling three methods, separating lines and in-neck.

Illustrating the Patterns

For each continuation pattern shown below, we describe the pattern and break it down, allowing you to recognize the formation more easily in the future. Starting with the bulls, let's have a look at rising three methods.

Rising Three Methods

This pattern starts out with what is called a "long white day". Then, on the second, third and fourth trading sessions small real bodies appear - these small real bodies form from a fall-off in price, but they still stay within the price range of the long white day (day one in the pattern). The fifth and last day of the pattern shows another long white day.

This pattern is, in the world of Japanese candlestick charting, a very bullish chart. It shows an upward trend on day one with investors taking a few trading sessions to relax to prepare for the next rise in price that occurs on the fifth day. Even though the pattern shows us that the prices are falling for three straight days, a new low is not seen and the bulls prepare for the next leg up.

Bullish Mat Hold

This pattern begins with a long white day and then, on the second day of trading, the issue gaps up and is a black day. What we see next in this pattern is somewhat similar to the previous pattern.

The second, third, and fourth days see the issue falling off slightly but not trading outside the range of the long white day on day one. Finally, the last day in the pattern is another long white day that closes above the close of the first long white day.

Separating Lines (Bullish)

In the pattern of bullish separating lines, you can see that the first day is a black day and the next day is a white day. The key to the second day is that the issue has the same opening price as day one.

In a bullish market, this pattern is simply viewed as a continuation of the trend because the second day starts off from where day one left off and continues the trading session to close higher still.

Now, on the bearish side of the equation, let's have a look at what the bears are looking for, starting with separating lines.

Separating Lines (Bearish)

You can see immediately that the bearish separating lines pattern is the exact opposite of the bullish separating lines pattern, so it does not need any further explanation.

Falling Three Methods (Bearish)

The pattern known as bearish falling three methods confuse many chartists at first. It is not until the third or fourth day of the pattern that it becomes clear.

Look closely and you can see that a new high is not formed from the high set on the first day. This is a very bearish signal and short sellers react strongly to this pattern.

In-Neck (Bearish)

The first day of the in-neck continuation pattern is a long black day and the second is a white day that shows an opening of trading below the low of the prior trading session. Then on the close, the price is equal to or just above the closing price of the prior session.

This pattern has the bears looking for the falling trend to continue but it may be some time before it is confirmed.

Conclusion

Learning to read and recognize candlestick patterns is important for anyone who aspires to trade based on chart patterns. Perfecting this skill will take time and practice - mastering it will elevate it to the level of an art. Remember it's your money, so think, learn and invest it wisely.
 
Oh, candlestick charts? Yeah, that’s honestly way more nuanced than people give it credit for. You can’t just squint at some colored rectangles and call yourself a market wizard—there’s a whole vibe to these things if you know what to look for. Loved your breakdown, by the way. Super clear, actually explains why people obsess about those weird little shapes.

Alright, let’s go:

### Candlestick Charting: Not Just Pretty Pictures

Basically, candlestick charts are the market’s mood ring. Each candle? It’s spilling the tea on who’s calling the shots—are buyers flexing or are sellers panicking? Unlike those super dull line charts (sorry, not sorry), these candles give you juicy, real-time info about all the drama happening in a single trading session. Sometimes that little extra detail is what stops you from YOLO’ing into a dumpster fire.

Those continuation patterns? Total cheat codes once you get them down. They tell you if the trend isn’t finished yet, like, “Don’t tap out now, this run’s still got legs,” or, “Hey, this dump isn’t over, maybe don’t buy just yet.” Anyone holding positions longer than a TikTok attention span, or trying to ride short-term swings, needs these patterns in their back pocket. For real.

### Bullish Patterns: Where the Magic Happens

Okay, let’s talk about the Rising Three Methods—this one’s basically bulls flexing on the haters. You see some teeny candles in the middle of a strong uptrend, right? Bears give it their best shot, but honestly, it’s like toddlers pushing against a brick wall. And once that fifth candle blasts higher, you better believe FOMO kicks in for everyone watching.

The Bullish Mat Hold is basically the same vibe but more in-your-face. Huge up day, then a little stutter-step, but nobody’s actually losing faith—think of it like bulls catching their breath before rushing up the stairs again. Last candle says, “We told you, don’t doubt the rally.”

Bullish Separating Lines—love the name—this pattern straight up claps back at a bearish move. You get a little dip, then boom, buyers come out swinging, smackdown style. It’s the market’s way of giving bears the side eye and saying, “Not today, buddy.”

### Bears Having Their Moment

Bears don’t always get to have fun, but when they do, it’s with stuff like Falling Three Methods. You’ll spot a drop, then these sad little attempt-at-a-comeback green candles, but honestly, it’s just a head fake. When price tanks again, it’s basically an all-you-can-eat buffet for short sellers.

Then there’s Bearish Separating Lines. Basically, it’s the evil twin of the bullish version. You’d think some buyers might rally, but nope, sellers just keep dunking on them all session.

In-Neck Pattern—now this one’s sneaky. The bulls try to play hero, but fail to even get past yesterday’s close. Not the strongest bear flag out there, but with the right follow through, it can spell some real trouble if you’re on the wrong side.

### Wrapping It Up

Candlestick charting isn’t just “spot the pattern, get rich.” It’s more like an art you gotta practice—a blend of pattern recognize, understanding the bigger trend, and reading the room (market sentiment). Learn that, and you stop blindly throwing darts at stocks. Instead, you start making informed moves. Well, as informed as anyone can be with this wild market.

So yeah, the rabbits run deep in candlestick land—it’s tricky, but totally worth it. Happy trading, and don’t let the red candles scare you too much.
 

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