Understanding Basic Candlestick Charts
Table of Contents
Candlestick charts originated
in Japan over 100 years before the West developed the bar and
point-and-figure charts. In the 1700s, a Japanese man named Homma
discovered that, while there was a link between price and the supply and demand of rice, the markets were strongly influenced by the emotions of traders.
Candlesticks show that emotion by visually representing the size of
price moves with different colors. Traders use the candlesticks to make
trading decisions based on regularly occurring patterns that help
forecast the short-term direction of the price.
Candlestick Components
Just like a bar chart, a daily candlestick shows the market's open, high, low, and close price for the day. The candlestick has a wide part, which is called the "real body."
This real body represents the price range between the open and close
of that day's trading. When the real body is filled in or black, it
means the close was lower than the open. If the real body is empty, it
means the close was higher than the open.
Traders can alter these colors in their trading platform. For example, a down candle is often shaded red instead of black, and up candles are often shaded green instead of white.
Key Takeaways
- Candlestick charts are used by traders to determine possible price movement based on past patterns.
- Candlesticks are useful when trading as they show four price points (open, close, high, and low) throughout the period of time the trader specifies.
- Many algorithms are based on the same price information shown in candlestick charts.
- Trading is often dictated by emotion, which can be read in candlestick charts.
Candlestick vs. Bar Charts
Just above and below the real body are the "shadows"
or "wicks." The shadows show the high and low prices of that day's
trading. If the upper shadow on a down candle is short, it indicates
that the open that day was near the high of the day.
A short upper shadow on an up day dictates that the close was near
the high. The relationship between the days open, high, low, and close
determines the look of the daily candlestick. Real bodies can be long or
short and black or white. Shadows can be long or short.
Bar charts
and candlestick charts show the same information, just in a different
way. Candlestick charts are more visual, due to the color coding of the
price bars and thicker real bodies, which are better at highlighting the
difference between the open and the close.
The above chart shows the same exchange-traded fund (ETF) over the
same time period. The lower chart uses colored bars, while the upper
uses colored candlesticks. Some traders prefer to see the thickness of
the real bodies, while others prefer the clean look of bar charts.
Basic Candlestick Patterns
Candlesticks are created by up and down movements in the price. While
these price movements sometimes appear random, at other times they form
patterns that traders use for analysis or trading purposes. There are
many candlestick patterns. Here a sampling to get you started.
Patterns are separated into bullish and bearish.
Bullish patterns indicate that the price is likely to rise, while
bearish patterns indicate that the price is likely to fall. No pattern
works all the time, as candlestick patterns represent tendencies in
price movement, not guarantees.
Bearish Engulfing Pattern
A bearish engulfing pattern develops in
an uptrend when sellers outnumber buyers. This action is reflected by a
long red real body engulfing a small green real body. The pattern
indicates that sellers are back in control and that the price could
continue to decline.
Bullish Engulfing Pattern
An engulfing pattern on the bullish side of the
market takes place when buyers outpace sellers. This is reflected in the
chart by a long green real body engulfing a small red real body. With
bulls having established some control, the price could head higher.
Bearish Evening Star
An evening star is a topping pattern. It
is identified by the last candle in the pattern opening below the
previous day's small real body. The small real body can be either red or
green. The last candle closes deep into the real body of the candle two
days prior. The pattern shows a stalling of the buyers and then the
sellers taking control. More selling could develop.
Bearish Harami
A bearish harami is a small real body (red) completely
inside the previous day's real body. This is not so much a pattern to
act on, but it could be one to watch. The pattern shows indecision on
the part of the buyers. If the price continues higher afterward, all may
still be well with the uptrend, but a down candle following this
pattern indicates a further slide.
Bullish Harami
The bullish harami
is the opposite or the upside down bearish harami. A downtrend is in
play, and a small real body (green) occurs inside the large real body
(red) of the previous day. This tells the technician that the trend is
pausing. If it is followed by another up day, more upside could be
forthcoming.
Bearish Harami Cross
A bearish harami cross occurs in an uptrend, where an up candle is followed by a doji—the
session where the candlestick has a virtually equal open and close. The
doji is within the real body of the prior session. The implications are
the same as the bearish harami.
Bullish Harami Cross
A bullish harami cross occurs in a downtrend, where a down candle is
followed by a doji. The doji is within the real body of the prior
session. The implications are the same as the bullish harami.
Let's look at a few more patterns in black and white, which are also common colors for candlestick charts.
Bullish Rising Three
This pattern starts out with what is called a "long white day." Then,
on the second, third, and fourth trading sessions, small real bodies
move the price lower, 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 is another long white day.
Even though the pattern shows us that the price is falling for three
straight days, a new low is not seen, and the bull traders prepare for
the next move up.
A slight variation of this pattern is when the second day gaps up
slightly following the first long up day. Everything else about the
pattern is the same; it just looks a little different. When that
variation occurs, it's called a "bullish mat hold."
Bearish Falling Three
The pattern starts out with a strong down day. This is followed by
three small real bodies that make upward progress but stay within the
range of the first big down day. The pattern completes when the fifth
day makes another large downward move. It shows that sellers are back in
control and that the price could head lower.
The Bottom Line
As Japanese rice traders discovered centuries ago,
investors' emotions surrounding the trading of an asset have a major
impact on that asset's movement. Candlesticks help traders to gauge the
emotions surrounding a stock, or other assets, helping them make better
predictions about where that stock might be headed.
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