The Evening Star and its cousin, the Morning Star, are two powerful reversal candle patterns. These are both three day patterns that work exceptionally well. The scenario for understanding the change in trader psychology for the Evening Star will be thoroughly discussed here since the opposite can be said for the Morning Star.
The Evening Star is a bearish reversal candle pattern, as its name suggests. The first day of this pattern is a long white candle-stick which fully enforces the current uptrend. On the open of the second day, prices gap up above the body of the first day. Trading on this second day is somewhat restricted and the close price is near the open price while remaining above the body of the first day. The body for the second day is small. This type of day following a long day is referred to as a Star pattern. A Star is a small body day that gaps away from a long body day. The third and last day of this pattern opens with a gap below the body of the star and closes lower with the close price below the midpoint of the first day.
The previous explanation was the perfect scenario. Many references will accept as valid, an Evening Star which does not meet each detail exactly. For instance, the third day might not gap down or the close on the third day might not be quite below the midpoint of the first day's body. These details are subjective when viewing a candlestick chart, but not when using a computer program to automatically identify the patterns. That is because computer programs require explicit instructions to read the candle chart, and don't allow for subjective interpretation.
No comments:
Post a Comment