chart-patterns-every-trader-needs-to-know

Chart Patterns Every Trader Needs To Know

chart patterns every trader needs to know. However, mastering them takes practice and familiarity. To use them effectively, one must recognize and interpret various patterns accurately. This involves understanding how these patterns indicate potential market movements, which helps in making informed trading decisions. Familiarity with common patterns, such as head and shoulders, triangles, and flags, is crucial. By consistently studying and observing these patterns in market charts, traders can enhance their ability to predict price movements and make better investment choices.

A chart pattern is a shape within a price chart that helps to suggest what prices might do next, based on what they have done in the past. Chart patterns are the basis of technical analysis and require a trader to know exactly what they are looking at, as well as what they are looking for.

Best chart patterns

There isn’t a single ‘best’ chart pattern since each one highlights different trends across a variety of markets. They make it easier to see previous market opens and closes. Some patterns are more suited to a volatile market, while others are less so. Certain patterns are best for a bullish market, while others work better in a bearish market. Knowing the best chart pattern for your specific market is crucial, as using the wrong one or being unsure of which to use can cause you to miss out on profit opportunities.

Before getting into the intricacies of different chart patterns, it is important that we briefly explain support and resistance levels. Support refers to the level at which an asset’s price stops falling and bounces back up. Resistance is where the price usually stops rising and dips back down.

Support And Resistance

The reason levels of support and resistance appear is because of the balance between buyers and sellers – or demand and supply. When there are more buyers than sellers in a market (or more demand than supply), the price tends to rise. When there are more sellers than buyers (more supply than demand), the price usually falls.

As an example, an asset’s price might be rising because demand is outstripping supply. However, the price will eventually reach the maximum that buyers are willing to pay, and demand will decrease at that price level. At this point, buyers might decide to close their positions.

This creates resistance, and the price starts to fall toward a level of support as supply begins to outstrip demand as more and more buyers close their positions. Once an asset’s price falls enough, buyers might buy back into the market because the price is now more acceptable – creating a level of support where supply and demand begin to equal out.

If the increased buying continues, it will drive the price back up towards a level of resistance as demand begins to increase relative to supply. Once a price breaks through a level of resistance, it may become a level of support.

Types of chart patterns

Chart patterns fall broadly into three categories: continuation patterns, reversal patterns and bilateral patterns.

  • A continuation signals that an ongoing trend will continue
  • Reversal chart patterns indicate that a trend may be about to change direction
  • Bilateral chart patterns let traders know that the price could move either way – meaning the market is highly volatile

For all of these patterns, you can take a position with CFDs. This is because CFDs enable you to go short as well as long – meaning you can speculate on markets falling as well as rising. You may wish to go short during a bearish reversal or continuation, or long during a bullish reversal or continuation – whether you do so depends on the pattern and the market analysis that you have carried out.

The most important thing to remember when using chart patterns as part of your technical analysis, is that they are not a guarantee that a market will move in that predicted direction – they are merely an indication of what might happen to an asset’s price.

1) Head and shoulders

Head and shoulders is a chart pattern in which a large peak has a slightly smaller peak on either side of it. Traders look at head and shoulders patterns to predict a bullish-to-bearish reversal.

Typically, the first and third peak will be smaller than the second, but they will all fall back to the same level of support, otherwise known as the ‘neckline’. Once the third peak has fallen back to the level of support, it is likely that it will breakout into a bearish downtrend.

2) Double top

A double top is another pattern that traders use to highlight trend reversals. Typically, an asset’s price will experience a peak, before retracing back to a level of support. It will then climb up once more before reversing back more permanently against the prevailing trend.

3) Double bottom

A double bottom chart pattern indicates a period of selling, causing an asset’s price to drop below a level of support. It will then rise to a level of resistance, before dropping again. Finally, the trend will reverse and begin an upward motion as the market becomes more bullish.

A double bottom is a bullish reversal pattern, because it signifies the end of a downtrend and a shift towards an uptrend.

4) Rounding bottom

A rounding bottom chart pattern can signify a continuation or a reversal. For instance, during an uptrend an asset’s price may fall back slightly before rising once more. This would be a bullish continuation.

An example of a bullish reversal rounding bottom – shown below – would be if an asset’s price was in a downward trend and a rounding bottom formed before the trend reversed and entered a bullish uptrend.

Traders will seek to capitalise on this pattern by buying halfway around the bottom, at the low point, and capitalising on the continuation once it breaks above a level of resistance.

5) Cup and handle

The cup and handle pattern is a bullish continuation pattern that shows a period of bearish market sentiment before the overall trend continues in a bullish motion. The cup resembles a rounding bottom chart pattern, while the handle is similar to a wedge pattern.

After the rounding bottom, the price of an asset typically enters a temporary retracement, known as the handle. This retracement is confined to two parallel lines on the price graph. The asset eventually reverses out of the handle and continues the overall bullish trend.

6) Wedges

Wedges form as an asset’s price movements tighten between two sloping trend lines. There are two types of wedge: rising and falling.

A rising wedge pattern features a trend line caught between two upwardly slanted lines of support and resistance, where the support line is steeper than the resistance line. This pattern generally signals that an asset’s price will eventually decline more permanently, demonstrated when it breaks through the support level.

A falling wedge occurs between two downwardly sloping levels. In this case the line of resistance is steeper than the support. A falling wedge is usually indicative that an asset’s price will rise and break through the level of resistance, as shown in the example below.

Both rising and falling wedges are reversal patterns, with rising wedges representing a bearish market and falling wedges being more typical of a bullish market.

7) Pennant or flags

Pennant patterns, or flags, are created after an asset experiences a period of upward movement, followed by a consolidation. Generally, there will be a significant increase during the early stages of the trend, before it enters into a series of smaller upward and downward movements.

Pennants can be either bullish or bearish, and they can represent a continuation or a reversal. The above chart is an example of a bullish continuation. In this respect, pennants can be a form of bilateral pattern because they show either continuations or reversals.

While a pennant may seem similar to a wedge pattern or a triangle pattern – explained in the next sections – it is important to note that wedges are narrower than pennants or triangles. Also, wedges differ from pennants because a wedge is always ascending or descending, while a pennant is always horizontal.

8) Ascending triangle

The ascending triangle is a bullish continuation pattern which signifies the continuation of an uptrend. Ascending triangles can be drawn onto charts by placing a horizontal line along the swing highs – the resistance – and then drawing an ascending trend line along the swing lows – the support.

Ascending triangles often have two or more identical peak highs which allow for the horizontal line to be drawn. The trend line signifies the overall uptrend of the pattern, while the horizontal line indicates the historic level of resistance for that particular asset.

9) Descending triangle

In contrast, a descending triangle signifies a bearish continuation of a downtrend. Typically, a trader will enter a short position during a descending triangle – possibly with CFDs – in an attempt to profit from a falling market.

Descending triangles typically signal a market dominated by sellers, resulting in successively lower peaks and continued downward movement. They are identified by a horizontal support line and a downward-sloping resistance line. The trend will eventually break through the support, allowing the downtrend to continue.

10) Symmetrical triangle

The symmetrical triangle pattern can be either bullish or bearish, depending on the market. In either case, it is normally a continuation pattern, which means the market will usually continue in the same direction as the overall trend once the pattern has formed.

Symmetrical triangles form when the price converges with a series of lower peaks and higher troughs. In the example below, the overall trend is bearish, but the symmetrical triangle shows us that there has been a brief period of upward reversals.



If there is no clear trend before the triangle pattern forms, the market could break out in either direction. This makes symmetrical triangles a bilateral pattern, meaning they are best used in volatile markets where there is no clear indication of which way an asset’s price might move. An example of a bilateral symmetrical triangle can be seen below.

Conclusion

All of the patterns explained in this article are useful technical indicators which can help you to understand how or why an asset’s price moved in a certain way – and which way it might move in the future. This is because chart patterns are capable of highlighting areas of support and resistance, which can help a trader decide whether they should open a long or short position; or whether they should close out their open positions in the event of a possible trend reversal.

2 responses to “Chart Patterns Every Trader Needs To Know”

  1. […] insight into the balance between buying and selling pressures, while others identify continuation patterns or market […]

  2. […] returns but come with a higher level of risk. Investors need to have a good understanding of the Share market and stay updated with the latest financial […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *