Quote from qdog:
That is of course, unless one is a position trader who scans charts of indexes and key stocks as a means determining future market direction.
On Monday a good number of dow components closed in bullish candlestick formations. On tuesday they all failed to confirm. Tomorrow could go either way? Any day can go either way.
Citigroup below, a component in the Dow 30 and other indexes is a good example.
Regards
James
Hi James,
It really doesn't matter whether one is a day trader, position trader or swing trader...
The bullish candlestick patterns you saw are
Pattern Signals and based upon the Nasdaq Composite chart you first posted...
An entry signal was not given until around 12noon est or 3pm est of
today.
Therefore, they did not fail.
However, I cannot speak for individual stocks that you mentioned because I do not follow the price action in realtime of individual stocks except for an occassional peak a few times per week at my long term investment holdings.
Simply, I think that you think that once you get a confirmed pattern signal...
You are thinking to enter immediately no matter what the price action is saying after that pattern signal is confirmed.
(please correct me if I'm wrong)
I'm saying to do
proper candlestick analysis you must
wait for the price action to confirm via an
Entry Signal.
Thus, there are two signals..
One called a Pattern Signal and the other called an Entry Signal.
Simply, if the entry signal doesn't get confirmed...
The Pattern Signal didn't fail nor succeeded...it wasn't tradable.
Yet, I'm not trying to convince you th change your approach to candlestick analysis especially if your satisfied with your results of only trading via the pattern signal only.
If it works...keep using it.
By the way...the Citigroup candlestick pattern in your chart is not a reliable pattern...
Another reason to use an Entry Signal to confirm the price action will support the Pattern Signal.
Although I don't have access to an intraday chart of Citigroup...
However...I suspect there probably were some Bullish Hammer patterns off the intraday lows today to validate an Entry Signal...
A valid Entry Signal that's profitable by the close would confirm that the Pattern Signal you saw yesterday (although weak)...
Did not fail.
Now that we both know we have different interpretations of candlestick patterns...
I'm curious what today would have needed to do from
open to close to tell
you that yesterday bullish patterns did not fail ???
Maybe I'm just a little surprised that today's price action that's still within the range of yesterday's price action is called a failure by you considering most candlestick traders I know would have waited for some sort'uv confirmation signal to yesterday's analysis.
Last of all, my comment about tomorrow can go either way is based upon the fact that swing traders using candlestick analysis via a Pattern Signal and an Entry Signal methodology...
Most likely got long off today's lows and are already profitable.
Tomorrow will determine if their profits will grow or decrease.
...However, tomorrow could go either way especially since its a big day of key economic reports...
That's what my comments meant and is applicable for those
already Long and not planning to chase yesterday's daily chart bullish candlestick patterns in Wednesday's price action...
Window of opportunity for an Entry in Tuesday's price action has now closed in reaction to Monday's bullish candlestick patterns.
P.S. The indices and their heavy weight components perform very well to Hammer patterns (big hint).
Sometimes I wonder if that saying about
buy low...sell high was coined by Hammer pattern traders.
NihabaAshi