What Is a Candlestick Pattern?

Learn about an ancient method of chart analysis

Candlestick Pattern Explained

Candlestick charts are a technical tool that packs data for multiple time frames into single price bars. This makes them more useful than traditional open, high, low, and close (OHLC) bars or simple lines that connect the dots of closing prices. Candlesticks build patterns that may predict price direction once completed. Proper color coding adds depth to this colorful technical tool, which dates back to 18th-century Japanese rice traders.

Traditionally, candlesticks are best used on a daily basis, the idea being that each candle captures a full day’s worth of news, data, and price action. This suggests that candles are more useful to longer-term or swing traders.

Most importantly, each candle tells a story. When looking at a candle, it’s best viewed as a contest between buyers and sellers. A light candle (green or white are typical default displays) means the buyers have won the day, while a dark candle (red or black) means the sellers have dominated. But what happens between the open and the close, and the battle between buyers and sellers, is what makes candlesticks so attractive as a charting tool.

Key Takeaways

  • Candlestick patterns are technical trading tools that have been used for centuries to predict price direction.
  • There are dozens of different candlestick patterns with intuitive, descriptive names; most also have a corollary pattern between the upside and downside. For instance, an “abandoned baby top” has its corollary in an “abandoned baby bottom;” “tweezer bottoms” have their upside corollary in “tweezer tops.”
  • Traders supplement candlestick patterns with additional technical indicators to refine their trading strategy (e.g., entry, exit).
  • Candlesticks are based on current and past price movements and are not future indicators.
Doji and spinning top

Let’s first take a look at the basics of candles so you can understand the various parts of a candlestick.

How to Read a Candlestick Pattern

A daily candlestick represents a market’s opening, high, low, and closing (OHLC) prices. The rectangular real body, or just body, is colored with a dark color (red or black) for a drop in price and a light color (green or white) for a price increase. The lines above and below the body are referred to as wicks or tails, and they represent the day’s maximum high and low. Taken together, the parts of the candlestick can frequently signal changes in a market’s direction or highlight significant potential moves that frequently must be confirmed by the next day’s candle.

Candlesticks

Image by Julie Bang © Investopedia 2019

Difference Between Foreign Exchange (FX) Candles and Other Markets’ Candles

Before we delve into some specific candlestick patterns, here is a small word about the difference between foreign exchange (FX) candlesticks and stock/exchange-traded fund (ETF)/futures and all other candlesticks. Because the FX market operates on a 24-hour basis, the daily close from one day is usually the open of the next day. As a result, there are fewer gaps in the price patterns in FX charts. FX candles can only exhibit a gap over a weekend, where the Friday close is different from the Monday open.

Many candlestick patterns rely on price gaps as an integral part of their signaling power, and those gaps should be noted in all cases. As for FX candles, one needs to use a little imagination to spot a potential candlestick signal that may not exactly meet the traditional candlestick pattern. For example, in the figure below taken from an FX chart, the bearish engulfing line’s body does not exactly engulf the previous day’s body, but the upper wick does. With a little imagination, you’ll be able to spot certain patterns, although they might not be textbook in their formation.

Examples of Candlestick Patterns

The examples below include several candlestick patterns that perform exceptionally well as precursors of price direction and potential reversals. Each works within the context of surrounding price bars in predicting higher or lower prices. They are also time sensitive in two ways:

  • They only work within the limitations of the chart being reviewed, whether intraday, daily, weekly, or monthly.
  • Their potency decreases rapidly three to five bars after the pattern has been completed.

Doji and Spinning Top

A doji (plural is also doji) is a candlestick formation where the open and close are identical, or nearly so. A spinning top is very similar to a doji, but with a very small body, in which the open and close are nearly identical.

Both patterns suggest indecision in the market, as the buyers and sellers have effectively fought to a standstill. But these patterns are highly important as an alert that the indecision will eventually evaporate and a new price direction will be forthcoming.

Here are some visual examples of doji and spinning tops:

Doji spinning top

Bullish/Bearish Engulfing Lines

An engulfing line is a strong indicator of a directional change. A bearish engulfing line is a reversal pattern after an uptrend. The key is that the second candle’s body “engulfs” the prior day’s body in the opposite direction. This suggests that, in the case of an uptrend, the buyers had a brief attempt higher but finished the day well below the close of the prior candle. This suggests that the uptrend is stalling and has begun to reverse lower. Also, note the prior two days’ candles, which showed a double top, or a tweezers top, itself a reversal pattern.

A bullish engulfing line is the corollary pattern to a bearish engulfing line, and it appears after a downtrend. Also, a double bottom, or tweezers bottom, is the corollary formation that suggests a downtrend may be ending and set to reverse higher.

Engulfing Lines

Hammer

A hammer suggests that a down move is ending (hammering out a bottom). Note the long lower tail, which indicates that sellers made another attempt lower, but were rebuffed and the price erased most or all of the losses on the day. The important interpretation is that this is the first time buyers have surfaced in strength in the current down move, which is suggestive of a change in directional sentiment. The pattern is confirmed by a bullish candle the next day.

Three bullish hammers

Hanging Man

A hanging man pattern suggests an important potential reversal lower and is the corollary to the bullish hammer formation. The story behind the candle is that, for the first time in many days, selling interest has entered the market, leading to the long tail to the downside. The buyers fought back, and the end result is a small, dark body at the top of the candle. Confirmation of a short signal comes with a dark candle on the following day.

Hanging man

Abandoned Baby Top/Bottom

An abandoned baby, also called an island reversal, is a significant pattern suggesting a major reversal in the prior directional movement. An abandoned baby top forms after an up move, while an abandoned baby bottom forms after a downtrend.

The pattern includes a gap in the direction of the current trend, leaving a candle with a small body (spinning top/or doji) all alone at the top or bottom, just like an island. Confirmation comes on the next day’s candle, where a gap lower (abandoned baby top) signals that the prior gap higher was erased and that selling interest has emerged as the dominant market force. Confirmation comes with a long, dark candle the next day.

Abandoned baby top

Take Special Note of Long Tails and Small Bodies

Candlesticks that have a small body—a doji, for example—indicate that the buyers and sellers fought to a draw, leaving the close nearly exactly at the open. (Such a candlestick could also have a very small body, effectively forming a spinning top.) Small bodies represent indecision in the marketplace over the current direction of the market.

This suggests that such small bodies are frequently reversal indicators, as the directional movement (up or down) may have run out of steam. Careful note of key indecision candles should be taken, because either the bulls or the bears will win out eventually. This is a time to sit back and watch the price behavior, remaining prepared to act once the market shows its hand.

Another key candlestick signal to watch out for are long tails, especially when they’re combined with small bodies. Long tails represent an unsuccessful effort of buyers or sellers to push the price in their favored direction, only to fail and have the price return to near the open. Just such a pattern is the doji shown below, which signifies an attempt to move higher and lower, only to finish out with no change. This comes after a move higher, suggesting that the next move will be lower.

Long-legged doji

Which Candlestick Pattern is Most Reliable?

Many patterns are preferred and deemed the most reliable by different traders. Some of the most popular are: bullish/bearish engulfing lines; bullish/bearish long-legged doji; and bullish/bearish abandoned baby top and bottom. In the meantime, many neutral potential reversal signals—e.g., doji and spinning tops—will appear that should put you on the alert for the next directional move.

Does Candlestick Pattern Analysis Really Work?

Yes, candlestick analysis can be effective if you follow the rules and wait for confirmation, usually in the next day’s candle. Traders around the world, especially out of Asia, utilize candlestick analysis as a primary means of determining overall market direction, not where prices will be in two to four hours. That’s why daily candles work best instead of shorter-term candlesticks.

How Do You Read a Candle Pattern?

A candle pattern is best read by analyzing whether it’s bullish, bearish, or neutral (indecision). Watching a candlestick pattern form can be time consuming and irritating. If you recognize a pattern and receive confirmation, then you have a basis for taking a trade. Be careful not to see patterns where there are none. Let the market do its thing, and you will eventually get a high-probability candlestick signal.

The Bottom Line

Candlestick analysis has been around for centuries and works for the same reason as other forms of technical analysis: because traders follow it. Candlesticks can be combined with other forms of technical analysis, such as momentum indicators, but candles ultimately are a stand-alone form of charting analysis.

Daily candlesticks are the most effective way to view a candlestick chart, as they capture a full day of market info and price action. If you opt to use shorter-term candles, be cognizant that their meaning lasts only for a few of the periods that you choose—for example, a four-hour candle pattern is only valid for around a few four-hour periods.

Candlestick signals come in individual candles (e.g., doji) as well as multi-candle patterns like bullish/bearish engulfing lines, bullish/bearish abandoned babies, and bullish hammers/bearish hanging man patterns. Candlesticks are great forward-looking indicators, but confirmation by subsequent candles is often essential to identifying a specific pattern and making a trade based on it. In particular, candlestick patterns frequently give off signals of indecision, alerting traders of a potential change in direction.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Pages 15, 25. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  2. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Page 25. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  3. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Pages 155-157. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  4. IG. "Spinning Top Candlestick: A Trader's Guide."

  5. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Pages 42-43, 87-91. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  6. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Pages 33-35. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  7. Steve Nison. "Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, 2nd Edition," Pages 33-34, 38-40. New York Institute of Finance, 2001.

  8. thinkorswim Learning Center. "Abandoned Baby."

  9. Thomas N. Bulkowski. "Encyclopedia of Candlestick Charts; Chapter 8, Abandoned Baby, Bullish." John Wiley and Sons, 2008.

Take the Next Step to Invest
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.
Take the Next Step to Invest
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.