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Just realized something interesting while digging into trading history. You know those candlestick charts everyone uses? They didn't come from some Silicon Valley tech bro. They were literally created by a rice trader named Munehisa Homma back in 1724 in Japan.
So here's what caught my attention: Homma wasn't just theorizing in some office. This guy was actively trading in one of the most volatile markets of his time - the Japanese rice exchange. And apparently, he went on an insane winning streak of over 100 consecutive trades. That's not luck. That's pattern recognition on another level.
What Homma figured out was something most traders still don't get today. He realized that price movements aren't random noise; they're basically a visual representation of what traders are feeling. Fear, greed, the whole emotional cycle. So he created this simple system to visualize it. The body of the candle shows you the open-close gap, and the shadows show you the highs and lows throughout the session. Everything you need to understand market sentiment is right there.
The genius part? It's still used everywhere. Crypto charts, stock markets, forex - doesn't matter. Munehisa Homma's innovation became the universal language for reading markets.
What I think people miss is that Homma's real edge wasn't the charts themselves. It was understanding that markets move on psychology. He studied behavior patterns, analyzed supply and demand dynamics, and used that to predict price action. That's the actual skill that made him legendary.
So if you're serious about trading, the lesson here isn't just "learn candlesticks." It's that the market is fundamentally about understanding human emotion and incentives. Homma proved that centuries ago, and nothing has really changed. The tools get fancier, but the psychology stays the same.
Worth thinking about next time you're analyzing a chart.