Candlestick Patterns Flashcards
Abandoned Baby Bottom Pattern
A very rare Japanese candlestick top or bottom reversal signal. It is comprised of a doji star that gaps away (including shadows) from the prior and following sessions’ candlesticks. This is the same as a Western island top or bottom in which the island session is also a doji.
Abandoned Baby Top Pattern
A very rare Japanese candlestick top or bottom reversal signal. It is comprised of a doji star that gaps away (including shadows) from the prior and following sessions’ candlesticks. This is the same as a Western island top or bottom in which the island session is also a doji.
Bearish Engulfing Pattern
A bearish engulfing candlestick pattern occurs when selling pressure overwhelms buying force as reflected by a long black real body engulfing a small white real body in an uptrend.
Bullish Engulfing Pattern
A bullish engulfing candlestick pattern is comprised of a large white real body that engulfs a small black real body in a downtrend.
Belt Hold Line Bearish Pattern
A bearish belt-hold is a long black candlestick that opens on, or near, its high and closes well off its open. Also referred to as a black opening shaven head.
Belt Hold Line Bullish Pattern
A bullish belt-hold is a tall white candlestick that opens on, or near, its low and closes well above the opening price. It is also called a white opening shaven bottom.
Counterattack Lines Bearish Pattern
Following a white candlestick in an uptrend the market sharply higher on the opening and then closes unchanged from the prior session’s close.
Counterattack Lines Bullish Pattern
Following a black candlestick in a downtrend the market gaps sharply lower on the opening and then closes unchanged from the prior session’s close.
Dark Cloud Cover Pattern
A bearish reversal signal. In an uptrend a long white candlestick is followed by a black candlestick that opens above the prior white candlestick’s high (or close) and then closes well into the white candlestick’s real body—preferably more than halfway. The bullish counterpart of the dark-cloud cover candlestick pattern is the piercing pattern.
Piercing Pattern
A Japanese candlestick bottom reversal signal. In a downtrend, a long black candlestick is followed by a gap lower open during the next session. This session finishes as a strong white candlestick that closes more than halfway into the prior black candlestick’s real body. Compare to the on-neck line, the in-neck line, and the thrusting line.
Doji Pattern
A session in which the open and close on a Japanese candlestick are the same (or almost the same). There are different varieties of doji lines (gravestone, dragonfly, and long-legged doji) depending on where the opening and closing are in relation to the entire range. Doji lines are among the most important individual candlestick patterns. They are also components of candlestick patterns. Northern doji are doji that appear during a rally. Southern doji are doji during declines.
Dumpling Top Pattern
A candlestick charting pattern that is similar to the Western rounding top. A window to the downside is needed to confirm this as a top. Its bullish opposite is the frypan bottom.
Evening Star Pattern
A top reversal pattern formed by three candle lines on a Japanese candlestick chart. The first is a tall white real body, the second is a small real body (white or black) that gaps above the first real body to form a star, and the third is a black candlestick that closes well into the first session’s white real body. If the middle portion of this candlestick pattern is a doji instead of a spinning top, it is an evening doji star. The opposite of the evening star candlestick pattern is the morning star pattern.
Morning Star Pattern
A bottom reversal pattern formed by three candlesticks. The first is a long black real body, the second is a small real body (white or black) that gaps lower to form a star, and the third is a white candlestick that closes well into the first session’s black real body. Its opposite is the evening star candlestick pattern.
Falling Three Pattern
The falling three methods is a bearish continuation pattern. It is ideally comprised of five lines. A long black real body is followed by three small, usually white, real bodies that hold within the first session’s high–low range. Then a black candlestick closes at a new low for the move.
Rising Three Pattern
The rising three methods is a bullish continuation pattern. A tall white candlestick precedes three small, usually black, real bodies that hold within the white candlestick’s range. The forth line of this pattern is a strong white candlestick that closes at a new high for the move.
Falling Window Pattern
The same as a Western gap. Windows are continuation candlestick patterns. If a window opens in a selloff, it is a falling window. This is a bearish signal. The falling window is resistance.
Rising Window Pattern
The same as a Western gap. Windows are continuation candlestick patterns. When the market opens a window to the upside, it is a rising window. It is a bullish candlestick pattern and the rising window should be support.