Introduction
Candlestick charting originated from the land of the rising sun over five centuries ago in the late 1600s when the Japanese began applying technical analysis to trade rice on the Dojima Rice Exchange. Munehisa Homma, one of the most famous to have traded on this exchange, used past prices to predict future price movements and generated an enormous amount of wealth. Homma’s trading principles in the rice markets eventually evolved into the candlestick theories used in Japan today.
Candlestick Appearance
To technicians, the popularity of the candlestick charts stems from its attractive visual representation as opposed to other charting techniques such as the line and bar charts. More information can be observed with a candlestick chart such as the relationship between the open and close as well as the high and low. As such, more analyses can now be performed and additional charting patterns can be used to assist the trader in the decision process. The underlying strength and overall structure of the markets are now more transparent with the aid of candlestick charts.
Types of Formations
The use of candlestick charts provides technicians with a whole new realm of charting analysis. Additional charting patterns can now be analyzed along with the traditional charting patterns, such as the head and shoulders and cup and handle formations. Some of the more popular candlestick formations include:
Marubozu
Spinning Tops
A spinning top following a long white candlestick (e.g. white marubozu) or a long up-trend signals weakness in the buying pressure and a potential reversal may be imminent. On the other hand, after a long decline or a long black candlestick (e.g. black marubozu), a spinning top can pose as a warning sign that the bears have weakened and that a change in trend may be on the horizon.
Long and Short Shadows
In contrast, candlestick formations with short bodies, long lower shadows, and short upper shadows generally indicate that sellers overwhelmed the buyers for most of the session and drove prices lower until later when the buying pressure resurfaced to cause the strong close, creating a long lower shadow in the process.
Doji
Long-legged Doji
Dragon Fly and Gravestone Doji
On the other hand, gravestone doji formations are created when the open, low, and close are equal, creating an inverted upper case T. The formation has a long upper shadow and no lower shadow. In general, for this formation, the buyers dominated trading for most of the session before the sellers came back and pushed prices back to the previous close, at the low.
The implications of both dragon fly doji and gravestone doji, as with all candlestick formations, depend on the preceding price action. For down-trends, black marubozu formations, or at support levels, these formations may be a sign of a potential reversal in the current down-trend. Conversely, for up-trends, white marubozu formations, or at resistance levels, these formations may indicate a reversal of the current up-trend.
Candlestick Patterns
There are many different candlestick formations and we have covered only a few in the previous section. On its own, most formations tend to have a neutral bias as to where the market is heading. In order to forecast successfully with candlesticks, the preceding price action must first be analyzed. There are countless candlestick patterns but the most important ones include:
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