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Candlestick patterns are one of the most important tools in technical analysis. They visually capture market psychology—showing who is in control, buyers or sellers—and help traders anticipate potential trend continuation or reversal.
This article explains three powerful single-candle patterns: Marubozu, Hammer, and Shooting Star.
A Marubozu is a candlestick with:
This means the entire trading session moved in one direction without any pullback.
It signals complete dominance by buyers (bullish) or sellers (bearish).
Meaning:
Buyers controlled the entire session.
It indicates strong upward momentum, often used to confirm an uptrend or a breakout.
Meaning:
Sellers dominated the market throughout the session.
It signals strong downward pressure and potential continuation of a downtrend.
A Hammer appears after a downtrend and has:
Meaning:
Sellers pushed the price down, but buyers stepped in strongly and pulled the price back near the open.
This shows buyer strength and the possibility of a trend reversal.
A Shooting Star forms after an uptrend and has:
Meaning:
Buyers pushed prices up, but sellers took control and forced the price back down by the close.
This creates uncertainty and signals a potential pullback or trend reversal.
| Pattern | Market Message | Who is in Control? |
|---|---|---|
| Bullish Marubozu | Strong buying pressure | Buyers |
| Bearish Marubozu | Intense selling pressure | Sellers |
| Hammer | Buyers defending the bottom | Buyers gaining control |
| Shooting Star | Sellers rejecting higher prices | Sellers gaining control |
Candlestick patterns are most powerful when:
