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Japanese Candlestick Patterns for Traders: A Complete Guide to Analysis
Price charts based on Japanese candlesticks remain the most effective tool for quick visual analysis of market movements and patterns. For technical analysts, these charts serve as the foundation of their entire toolkit, allowing them to recognize signals across any timeframes and market conditions.
Basics: What Are Japanese Candlesticks and Why Are They Important
Japanese candlesticks are a type of price chart that display four key levels: opening and closing prices, and the high and low values for a given period. Although there are many formats for visualizing data, Japanese candlesticks have become dominant because of their ability to convey market sentiment through a single graphical form.
Originating among Japanese rice traders centuries ago, candlesticks experienced a renaissance in Western markets after 1989, when analyst Steve Nison first introduced them to American traders. Over time, sequences of candlesticks form recognizable patterns that experienced traders use to identify key support and resistance levels. Some of these patterns reveal the balance of power between buyers and sellers, while others signal trend continuation or periods of indecision.
Anatomy of a Candle: Body, Wick, and Their Interpretation
To fully read charts, it’s essential to distinguish three main elements of each candlestick: its color, body, and wick (also called shadow or tail). The color indicates the direction of movement during the period, the body reflects the open-close levels, and the wick shows extreme values.
On most daily charts, green (or white) candles indicate upward movement, while red (or black) candles indicate downward movement. A green candle’s upper boundary corresponds to the close price, and the lower boundary to the open. Conversely, a red candle’s top and bottom are the opposite. The wick’s high point always marks the period’s maximum, and the low point marks the minimum.
The lengths of bodies and wicks tell us about price dynamics and market sentiment:
The upper wick’s story: a long upper wick suggests initial optimism and buying pressure, later reflected by sellers taking profits. A short wick indicates less uncertainty and testing of high levels.
The lower wick’s story: a long lower wick indicates initial pessimism and heavy selling, later overcome by active buying interest. A short lower wick suggests minimal pessimism and a slight price recovery.
Single-Period Patterns and Their Trading Signals
Single-period candlestick patterns form within one trading period and often serve as the basis for more complex configurations.
Neutral Range Candle (Marubozu in neutral interpretation). A pattern with a short body, balanced between wicks of equal length, signals market indecision and no clear direction. Buyers pushed the price up, sellers pushed it down, resulting in minimal change. Such candles are often interpreted as consolidation or pause periods after strong trend moves.
Doji Candle forms when open and close prices are the same, creating a cross or plus sign shape. There are four classic types: long-legged (long upper and lower wicks), gravestone (long upper wick only), dragonfly (long lower wick only), and four-price (no wicks at all). Doji reflects intense struggle between buyers and sellers without a clear winner, and while the candle itself is neutral, it gains significance after prolonged trends.
Marubozu Candle (from Japanese meaning “bald”) has no wicks at all. A bullish Marubozu opens at the period’s low and closes at the high, showing absolute upward dominance. A bearish Marubozu opens at the high and closes at the low, indicating complete downward control. The longer the body, the stronger the dominance.
Hammer features a long lower wick roughly two to three times the body length, with little or no upper wick. This pattern indicates that despite significant selling pressure (pushing the price down), buyers intervened and reversed the market upward before close. The hammer often signals a potential reversal after a downtrend, but experienced traders wait for confirmation before entering a position.
Inverted Hammer has a similar structure but upside down: a long upper wick and a small body at the bottom. It shows initial buying pressure later reflected by sellers. It can signal upcoming buyer control.
Hanged Man (bearish equivalent of the hammer) looks similar but forms after an uptrend, not a downtrend. It indicates increasing selling pressure and possible reversal. A red hanging man candle is considered a more significant signal than a green one.
Shooting Star is an inverted shape candle forming after an upward move. It has a small body and a long upper wick. Often appearing after a minor upward breakout, it indicates the price reached a high and then fell below the open level. Both green and red versions suggest a possible reversal.
Multi-Period Patterns: Combined Signals
Double and multi-period candlestick patterns form over two or more consecutive periods and often provide more reliable trading signals.
Engulfing Pattern occurs when a candle of opposite direction “engulfs” the previous candle’s range. A bullish engulfing has a long green candle fully covering the prior red candle, with the larger the engulfment, the stronger the buy signal. A bearish engulfing is the opposite. Context is crucial: engulfing is more significant after a prolonged trend or at support/resistance levels.
Piercing Pattern consists of a long red candle followed by a long green candle. Often separated by a gap, indicating strong buying pressure. The close of the second candle should be above the midpoint of the first candle’s body. This pattern signals a potential reversal after a downtrend.
Using Contracts for Difference (CFDs) allows traders to open both long and short positions regardless of trend direction. When bullish patterns appear, a buy position is opened; when bearish, a sell. Understanding these candlestick patterns forms the basis for successful trading across various timeframes.