Quote from MKTrader:
It wasn't just a single hammer. It was also a triple bottom of sorts, near a previous resistance area (April 2010) and near a long-term Fib level (38.2% from summer 2010 low to April 2011 high). There were quite a few reasons to think yesterday was at least an intermediate-term bottom.
TA works sometimes, maybe enough to be profitable (depending on your skills), but it's not foolproof. If you always look for a reason why something "wasn't really a buy/sell signal" in hindsight, you're just curve-fitting.
First, 1a2b3cppp never said what you just said. In fact, he only discussed a single hammer (yesterday) and then later discussed today a possible double hammer setup. Japanese Candlestick analysis wasn't designed as such and it allows the bashers (e.g. Clubber Lang) to show up to say it candlestick analysis doesn't work or TA doesn't work when in reality it's being used incorrectly.
As I stated before, this is not a bullish pattern via what he stated...he needs
confirmation. As for Fib stuff...I'm not a Fib guy and I don't see any intermediate-term bottoms, double bottom nor triple bottom.
With that said, that link I posted earlier discusses a few
myths about Japanese Candlestick analysis or TA in general.
1. Don't use single candlestick analysis. It's a myth that it's a reliable trade method.
2. Don't use Japanese Candlestick analysis by itself. It's a myth that it's reliable by itself. It should only be used as a confirmation tool into an obvious price direction.
Hello...the market has not been going up.
3. Don't ignore the overall
market context when using TA. Debt ceiling crisis the prior few weeks along with today's ECB conference is the market context. That's only a few things in the recent market context acting like a black cloud over the markets that I have time to mention.
Yeah, you can do some Long positions...keep it tight on the stops and lower the position size because it's high risk trading until we get confirmation via market context and TA in combo.
P.S. I'm a TA user but I don't use it alone.
Mark