How to Read Candlestick Charts: 12 Patterns Every Trader Must Know
EducationMarch 1, 202611 min read

How to Read Candlestick Charts: 12 Patterns Every Trader Must Know

1
10xTrade Research
Technical Analysis Team

The Language of Candlesticks

Candlestick charts originated in 18th-century Japan for rice trading. Today, they're the most popular chart type because they convey four data points per period: Open, High, Low, and Close.

Anatomy of a Candlestick

  • Body: The rectangle between the open and close prices
  • Upper Wick (Shadow): The line above the body showing the high
  • Lower Wick (Shadow): The line below the body showing the low
  • Green/Bullish: Close is higher than the open
  • Red/Bearish: Close is lower than the open
  • Reversal Patterns (Bullish)

    1. Hammer

    A small body at the top with a long lower wick (at least 2x the body). Signals that sellers drove prices down, but buyers pushed back strongly. Most reliable at the bottom of a downtrend.

    2. Bullish Engulfing

    A large green candle completely engulfs the previous red candle. Shows a decisive shift from selling to buying pressure.

    3. Morning Star

    A three-candle pattern: large red candle → small body (star) → large green candle. The star represents indecision, followed by bullish confirmation.

    4. Piercing Line

    A two-candle pattern where a green candle opens below the previous red candle's low but closes above its midpoint.

    Reversal Patterns (Bearish)

    5. Shooting Star

    A small body at the bottom with a long upper wick. Signals rejection of higher prices. Most reliable at the top of an uptrend.

    6. Bearish Engulfing

    A large red candle completely engulfs the previous green candle. Indicates a shift from buying to selling pressure.

    7. Evening Star

    The bearish counterpart to the morning star: large green candle → small body → large red candle.

    8. Dark Cloud Cover

    A red candle opens above the previous green candle's high but closes below its midpoint.

    Continuation Patterns

    9. Doji

    The open and close are virtually identical, creating a cross or plus sign. Represents market indecision. A doji after a strong trend often precedes a reversal.

    10. Three White Soldiers

    Three consecutive green candles with progressively higher closes. Confirms a strong bullish continuation.

    11. Three Black Crows

    Three consecutive red candles with progressively lower closes. Confirms a strong bearish continuation.

    12. Rising/Falling Three Methods

    A long candle followed by 3-4 small counter-trend candles, then another long candle in the original direction. Represents a brief pause before the trend resumes.

    How to Trade Candlestick Patterns

  • Context Matters: A hammer at a key support level is far more significant than one in the middle of nowhere.
  • Confirmation: Wait for the next candle to confirm the pattern before entering.
  • Volume: Patterns accompanied by higher-than-average volume are more reliable.
  • Timeframe: Patterns on the daily and 4-hour charts are more significant than those on 1-minute charts.
  • Combine with Indicators: Use candlestick patterns alongside support/resistance, moving averages, or RSI for higher probability setups.
  • Practice identifying these patterns on 10xTrade's advanced charting tools with real-time market data.

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