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Take 3 minutes to read this carefully – or keep making the same old mistakes again
Most people look at charts every day, but they don’t really understand what it’s telling them.
When prices go up, they rush to buy.
When prices go down, they panic and sell.
Then they conclude that the market causes them to lose money.
The truth is: the market always leaves traces. It’s just that you don’t know how to read them.
Prices don’t move randomly. They create repeating structures over hundreds of years because what’s behind the chart never changes: human psychology – fear, greed, hope, panic.
Once you understand these patterns, your market perspective will be completely different.
Important Reversal Patterns
When the price hits the same resistance level twice and then turns around, it’s not random. It indicates weakening buying pressure.
When the support zone between the two tops is broken, a downtrend usually begins.
The downward target can be estimated by the distance from the top to the support level.
Conversely, if the price holds a support level twice and then breaks above resistance, it’s a bullish signal.
This is one of the most reliable patterns.
The left shoulder forms a peak and then corrects, the head forms a higher peak and then declines, and the right shoulder cannot surpass the head.
When the neckline (neckline) is broken, strong selling pressure often appears.
At the end of a downtrend, the inverse pattern will be a strong buy signal.
Falling wedge: prices gradually narrow within a downtrend, weakening selling pressure. A breakout upward often results in a strong rally.
Rising wedge: prices narrow within an uptrend, and a breakdown downward is likely.
Prices form a U-shape, accumulating slowly. When completed, it often signals a long-term uptrend.
Rare but powerful. Prices expand then contract. Usually appears at the top and breaks downward.
Trend Continuation Patterns
After a strong rise or fall, the market often “rests” before continuing:
Flag (Flag)
Pennant (Pennant)
Symmetrical Triangle: increasing buying pressure, breaking resistance leads to a breakout.
Descending Triangle: increasing selling pressure, breaking support leads to a sharp decline.
Symmetrical Triangle: energy is consolidating, direction is uncertain – wait for a breakout.
Harmonic Patterns & Fibonacci
Patterns like ABCD, Gartley, Butterfly are based on Fibonacci ratios.
Point D is often the entry point with a very favorable Risk/Reward ratio if the structure is complete.
Most Important
Knowing the pattern alone is not enough.
If a breakout occurs without increased volume, it could be a false breakout.
Prioritize patterns on higher timeframes.
Do not enter trades before the pattern is complete.
These structures work on stocks, forex, crypto, or commodities – because human psychology never changes.
Before each trade, ask yourself:
Am I reacting emotionally, or am I reading the market structure?
The market always speaks.
The people who make money are those who know how to listen.