Quote from IronFist:
...However, today's candle shape (at stockcharts.com) for SPY suggets that tomorrow might be an up day. It's an inverse hammer, but following a downtrend... isn't that a bullish symbol?
(In before Nihaba Ashi comes in here and tells me I'm wrong with my candle shape analysis)
Quote from IronFist:
Hey, I was right
SPY +1.71%
You and I never had a discussion about an inverted hammer in SPY even though you didn't say we did.
Just wanted to make sure someone reading your comments don't assume we did have a conversation about SPY.
I do remember replying to your comments after you replied to cashmoney69 about his WAG chart.
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/attachment.php?s=&postid=1331958
Here's the actual discussion...
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=85045&perpage=1&pagenumber=40
We will now have a discussion about SPY.
Simply, the Inverted Hammer on your SPY chart is different (occurring after a down expansion interval) in comparison to your Inverted Hammer commentary on the WAG chart (occurring after a up expansion interval).
Another way to look at it...the one on the WAG chart is involved in a Exit Method.
The one you just mentioned on your SPY chart is involved in a Entry Method.
Two completely different price action situations.
What was wrong (as shown in your quote involving WAG) was that you called an Inverted Hammer a Shooting Star in your commentary to cashmoney69.
You even put a question mark after the words Shooting Star to imply you were unsure.
However, your recent commentary involving SPY and its Inverted Hammer occurring after a down trend...
That's correct in that it is a Inverted Hammer (you didn't call it a Shooting Star).
Is a Inverted Hammer that gaps down via its body in a downtrend a bullish sign as you implied above?
I don't know nor do I trade such a pattern.
Therefore, I cannot comment upon using such a pattern as a bullish reason to buy something.
Once again, your wrong analysis had everything to do with incorrect terminology of a Japanese Candlestick line you called a Shooting Star in your reply to cashmoney69 when in fact it was an Inverted Hammer.
Shooting Stars can only occur within or after a price rise that involved a expansion interval or volatility spike...
They do not occur as part of a price pullback.
Inverted Hammers can occur either in a price pullback after a price rise or they can occur in a downtrend that involved a expansion interval or volatility spike.
Thus, inverted hammers are more dynamic than shooting stars.
Just setting the record straight so that you don't think I was talking about price direction involving your commentary when in fact I was talking about you incorrectly labeling a candlestick line as something it was not.
Mark
(a.k.a.
NihabaAshi) Japanese Candlestick term