Note the Doji (or near Doji) on the daily SPY. It's at the top of the recent trend. Here is some insight from Steve Nison on the Doji at tops:
"THE IMPORTANCE OF THE DOJI
The perfect doji session has the same opening and closing price, yet there is some flexibility to this rule. If the opening and closing price are within a few ticks of each other (for example, a 1/4 cent in grains or a few thirty-seconds in bonds, and so on), the line could still be viewed as a doji. How do you decide whether a near-doji day (that is, where the open and close are very close, but not exact) should be considered a doji?
DOJI AT TOPS
Doji are valued for their ability to call market tops. The reason
for the doji's negative implications in uptrends is because a doji represents indecision. Indecision, uncertainty, or vacillation by buyers will not maintain an uptrend. It takes the conviction of buyers to sustain a rally. If the market has had an extended rally, or is overbought, and then a doji surface (read "indecision"), it could mean the scaffolding of buyers'
support will give way."