ANALYZING CHART
PATTERNS: CONCLUSION
This introduction to
chart patterns has provided a broad overview of chart pattern analysis and
several of the largest patterns.
Here's a brief
summary of what we've covered:
Chart analysis is the
technique of using patterns formed on a securities chart to formulate buy and
sell signals.
There are two types
of chart patterns: reversal and continuation.
A continuation
pattern suggests that the prior trend will continue upon completion of the
pattern.
A reversal pattern
suggests that the prior trend will reverse upon completion of the pattern.
A head-and-shoulders
top suggests a reversal in the prior uptrend.
An inverse head and
shoulders suggests a reversal in the prior downtrend.
A cup-and-handle
pattern is a bullish continuation pattern that suggests a continuation of the
prior uptrend.
A double top is a
bearish reversal pattern, which suggests that the preceding up trend will
reverse after confirmation of the pattern.
A double bottom is a
bullish reversal pattern, which suggests that the prior downtrend will reverse.
There are three main
types of triangle patterns - symmetrical, descending and ascending, which are
constructed by converging trendlines.
A symmetrical
triangle, which is formed when two similarly sloped trendlines converge,
typically suggests a continuation of the prior trend.
A descending
triangle, which is formed when a downward sloping trendline converges towards a
horizontal support line, suggests a downward trend after completion of the pattern.
An ascending
triangle, which is formed when an upward sloping trendline converges towards a
horizontal resistance line, suggests an uptrend after completion of the
pattern.
Flags and pennants
are continuation patterns formed after a sharp price movement. The move
consolidates, forming a flag shape or pennant share, and suggests another
strong move in the same direction of the prior move upon completion.
A wedge chart pattern
suggests a reversal in the prior trend when the price action moves outside of
the converging trend lines in the opposite direction of the prior trend.
A gap is formed on a
chart when there is an empty space between two time periods. Common gap
patterns include:
common, breakaway, runaway (measuring) and exhaustion.
A triple top is a
reversal pattern formed when a security attempts to move past a level of
resistance three times and fails. Upon failure of the third attempt the trend
is thought to reverse and move in a downward trend.
A triple bottom is a
reversal pattern formed when a security attempts to move below an area of
support three times but fails to do so. Upon failure of the third attempt below
resistance the trend is thought to reverse and move upward.
A rounding bottom is
a long-term reversal pattern that signals a shift from a downward trend to an
upward trend.
* Browse previous
posts to study this elaborately
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