Quote from GiaMa:
For instance, these kind of "filtering".
First picture is the Eurostoxx, daily, at friday close.
I see the last candle as an Hanging Man but, as we are still in short term uptrend, I think that this H.M. alone is not enough to suggest to go short. At least is too risky to short on this close.
Hi GiaMa,
I'm sure you've probably already read (book or website) that the Hanging Man is a bearish reversal signal that requires confirmation via the price action of the following trading day.
Now...unless you know something about candlesticks that puts you ahead of those authors while your trading via candlesticks...
I would
not advise doing an early bird entry and hope that by the end of the trading day you've caught a big fat worm.
With that said...Lefty62151 said something valuable that correlates with that first chart (hanging man)...
...I would be looking for a close lower than the midline of the previous candle...
I'll take it one step further...the price action the day after hanging man needs to close below the mid-point of the
wide range body that occurred prior to the hanging man line...
Preferrably it be a dark candlestick line that doesn't close below the low of the dark line that occurred before the wide range body.
As for your 2nd chart...I don't like to discuss stock charts.
With that said...I'm going to make an exception and say the following without discussing any candlestick patterns...
Only discussing price action only.
Both of those price action on your chart that's circled are the exact same short signal based on the interaction of the wide range body and the 3 intervals after the wide range body.
A wide range body that gives a lot of info about supply/demand.
The only difference between the two circled wide range bodies is that one gives more info about supply/demand than the other.
In addition, the bullish version of that price action occurred on your chart.
I'll leave it at that and let you figure out the rest on your own.
Now...notice how I haven't discussed any indicators as filters...don't need to.
The filters are in the price action itself...they can be either the price action that leads into the wide range body, the price action between the wide range body and your entry day or the big picture (key econ reports, geo-political events, regular schedule market events
et cetera).
Last of all...when it comes to stock charts...I wouldn't recommend applying candlestick analysis unless its a stock your very familiar with which implies you trade it enough to understand its price action especially how it behaves with the market itself and its fundamentals.
NihabaAshi