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#比特币对比代币化黄金 Let's talk about how to use the Evening Star candlestick pattern in actual trading.
This pattern is actually quite easy to spot—three consecutive candlesticks, with the middle one having the longest real body (it can be bullish or bearish), and the candlesticks on both sides having relatively small real bodies. The key is that it usually appears at the top of an uptrend, signaling a possible reversal.
Application advice: Don’t blindly go short just because you see an Evening Star. It’s best to look at it together with other indicators like trading volume, support levels, and MACD divergence. If the Evening Star appears along with a significant increase in volume, and it happens to touch a previous high, then the probability of a reversal is much higher.
Set your stop loss above the highest point of the Evening Star, so you can exit quickly if you’re wrong. Technical analysis is never 100% accurate, but mastering these classic patterns can at least save you some tuition fees in the market.
When chasing highs, this is what I fear the most. You really have to set a stop-loss, or you'll get liquidated instantly.
Another classic pattern lesson, but in actual trading, I encounter more fake breakouts than real reversals.
One word: greed. Most people can't control themselves when they see a reversal signal.
You need to look at the trading volume as well; otherwise, it's all nonsense. I learned this the hard way.
At most, use it as a reference. Never go all in—the market isn't that simple.