Japanese candlesticks

Candlestick patterns

Long lines

Marubozu

Doji

Intra-day doji formation

Dragonfly doji

Hammer

Inverted hammer

Gravestone doji

Hanging man

Dark cloud cover

Piercing line

Engulfing

· Bullish engulfing

· Intra-day bullish engulfing

· Bearish engulfing

· Intra-day bearish engulfing

Star formations

· Morning star

· Evening star

· Evening star

· Shooting star

Harami

· Bearish harami

· Bullish harami

· Harami cross




Hammer and Gravestone

Hammer

The hammer is not as strong as the dragonfly candlestick, but also signals reversal after a down-trend: control has shifted from sellers to buyers. The shadow of the candlestick should be at least twice the height of the body.

A price pattern in candlestick charting that occurs when a security trades significantly lower than its opening, but rallies later in the day to close either above or close to its opening price. This pattern forms a hammer-shaped candlestick.

Investopedia Says: A hammer occurs after a security has been declining, possibly suggesting the market is attempting to determine a bottom. The signal does not mean bullish investors have taken full control of a security, it simply indicates that the bulls are strengthening.

The Hammer candlestick formation is a significant bullish reversal candlestick pattern that mainly occurs at the bottom of downtrends.

The Hammer formation is created when the open, high, and close are roughly the same price. Also, there is a long lower shadow, twice the length as the real body.

When the high and the close are the same, a bullish Hammer candlestick is formed and it is considered a stronger formation because the bulls were able to reject the bears completely plus the bulls were able to push price even more past the opening price.

In contrast, when the open and high are the same, this Hammer formation is considered less bullish, but nevertheless bullish. The bulls were able to counteract the bears, but were not able to bring the price back to the price at the open.

The long lower shadow of the Hammer implies that the market tested to find where support and demand was located. When the market found the area of support, the lows of the day, bulls began to push prices higher, near the opening price. Thus, the bearish advance downward was rejected by the bulls.

The chart below of American International Group (AIG) stock illustrates a Hammer reversal pattern after a downtrend:

In the chart above of AIG, the market began the day testing to find where demand would enter the market. AIG's stock price eventually found support at the low of the day. In fact, there was so much support and subsequent buying pressure, that prices were able to close the day even higher than the open, a very bullish sign.

The Hammer is an extremely helpful candlestick pattern to help traders visually see where support and demand is located. After a downtrend, the Hammer can signal to traders that the downtrend could be over and that short positions should probably be covered.

However, other indicators should be used in conjunction with the Hammer candlestick pattern to determine buy signals, for example, waiting a day to see if a rally off of the Hammer formation continues or other chart indications such as a break of a downward trend line. But other previous day's clues could enter into a trader’s analysis. An example of these clues, in the chart above of AIG, shows three prior day's Doji's (signs of indecision) that suggested that prices could be reversing trend; in that case and for an aggressive buyer, the Hammer formation could be the trigger to go long.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Candlestick chart has resemblance with that of a bar chart in format. Its specialty is that it extenuates the relation between closing and opening prices. For more
See here.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for such a well written article. It’s full of insightful information and entertaining descriptions. Your point of view is the best among many.Candlestick analysis

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