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Japanese Candlesticks

Overview

In the 1600s, the Japanese developed a method of technical analysis to analyze the price of rice contracts. This technique is called candlestick charting. Steven Nison is credited with popularizing candlestick charting and has become recognized as the leading expert on their interpretation.

Candlestick charts display the open, high, low, and closing prices in a format similar to a modern-day bar-chart, but in a manner that extenuates the relationship between the opening and closing prices. Candlestick charts are simply a new way of looking at prices, they don’t involve any calculations.

Each candlestick represents one period (e.g., day) of data.
The figure below displays the elements of a candle.

 

Japanese Candlestick

 

Interpretation

I have met investors who are attracted to candlestick charts by their mystique–maybe they are the “long forgotten Asian secret” to investment analysis. Other investors are turned-off by this mystique–they are only charts, right? Regardless of your feelings about the heritage of candlestick charting, I strongly encourage you to explore their use. Candlestick charts dramatically illustrate changes in the underlying supply/demand lines.

Because candlesticks display the relationship between the open, high, low, and closing prices, they cannot be displayed on securities that only have closing prices, nor were they intended to be displayed on securities that lack opening prices. If you want to display a candlestick chart on a security that does not have opening prices, I suggest that you use the previous day’s closing prices in place of opening prices. This technique can create candlestick lines and patterns that are unusual, but valid.

The interpretation of candlestick charts is based primarily on patterns. The most popular patterns are explained below.

 

Bullish Patterns

Japanese Candlestick
Long white (empty) line
This is a bullish line. It occurs when prices open near the low and close significantly higher near the period’s high.

Japanese Candlestick
Hammer
This is a bullish line if it occurs after a significant downtrend. If the line occurs after a significant up-trend, it is called a Hanging Man. A Hammer is identified by a small real body (i.e., a small range between the open and closing prices) and a long lower shadow (i.e., the low is significantly lower than the open, high, and close). The body can be empty or filled-in.

Japanese Candlestick
Piercing line
This is a bullish pattern and the opposite of a dark cloud cover. The first line is a long black line and the second line is a long white line. The second line opens lower than the first line’s low, but it closes more than halfway above the first line’s real body.

Japanese Candlestick
Bullish engulfing lines
This pattern is strongly bullish if it occurs after a significant downtrend (i.e., it acts as a reversal pattern). It occurs when a small bearish (filled-in) line is engulfed by a large bullish (empty) line.

Japanese Candlestick
Morning star
This is a bullish pattern signifying a potential bottom. The “star” indicates a possible reversal and the bullish (empty) line confirms this. The star can be empty or filled-in.

Japanese Candlestick
Bullish doji star
A “star” indicates a reversal and a doji indicates indecision. Thus, this pattern usually indicates a reversal following an indecisive period. You should wait for a confirmation (e.g., as in the morning star, above) before trading a doji star. The first line can be empty or filled in.

 

Bearish Patterns

Japanese Candlestick
Long black (filled-in) line
This is a bearish line. It occurs when prices open near the high and close significantly lower near the period’s low.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Hanging Man
These lines are bearish if they occur after a significant uptrend. If this pattern occurs after a significant downtrend, it is called a Hammer. They are identified by small real bodies (i.e., a small range between the open and closing prices) and a long lower shadow (i.e., the low was significantly lower than the open, high, and close). The bodies can be empty or filled-in.

Japanese Candlestick
Dark cloud cover
This is a bearish pattern. The pattern is more significant if the second line’s body is below the center of the previous line’s body (as illustrated).

 

Japanese Candlestick
Bearish engulfing lines
This pattern is strongly bearish if it occurs after a significant up-trend (i.e., it acts as a reversal pattern). It occurs when a small bullish (empty) line is engulfed by a large bearish (filled-in) line.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Evening star
This is a bearish pattern signifying a potential top. The “star” indicates a possible reversal and the bearish (filled-in) line confirms this. The star can be empty or filled-in.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Doji star
A star indicates a reversal and a doji indicates indecision. Thus, this pattern usually indicates a reversal following an indecisive period. You should wait for a confirmation (e.g., as in the evening star illustration) before trading a doji star.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Shooting star
This pattern suggests a minor reversal when it appears after a rally. The star’s body must appear near the low price and the line should have a long upper shadow.

 

Reversal Patterns

Japanese Candlestick
Long-legged doji
This line often signifies a turning point. It occurs when the open and close are the same, and the range between the high and low is relatively large.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Dragon-fly doji
This line also signifies a turning point. It occurs when the open and close are the same, and the low is significantly lower than the open, high, and closing prices.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Gravestone doji
This line also signifies a turning point. It occurs when the open, close, and low are the same, and the high is significantly higher than the open, low, and closing prices.

Japanese Candlestick
Star
Stars indicate reversals. A star is a line with a small real body that occurs after a line with a much larger real body, where the real bodies do not overlap. The shadows may overlap.

 

Neutral Patterns

Japanese Candlestick
Spinning tops
These are neutral lines. They occur when the distance between the high and low, and the distance between the open and close, are relatively small.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Doji
This line implies indecision. The security opened and closed at the same price. These lines can appear in several different patterns. Double doji lines (two adjacent doji lines) imply that a forceful move will follow a breakout from the current indecision.

Japanese Candlestick
Harami (“pregnant” in English)
This pattern indicates a decrease in momentum. It occurs when a line with a small body falls within the area of a larger body. In this example, a bullish (empty) line with a long body is followed by a weak bearish (filled-in) line. This implies a decrease in the bullish momentum.

 

Japanese Candlestick
Harami cross
This pattern also indicates a decrease in momentum. The pattern is similar to a harami, except the second line is a doji (signifying indecision).