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I've noticed that many traders overlook one of the simplest yet most powerful signals in technical analysis: the engulfing pattern. It's funny because once you understand how to read it, you start seeing it everywhere on charts.
The concept is basic: you have two candles, and the second completely engulfs the first. That's it. But what's happening behind the scenes is a battle between buyers and sellers playing out in real time.
There are two versions. The bullish engulfing occurs when you're in a downtrend and a large green candle arrives and swallows the previous red candle. This means buyers are taking back control. Conversely, the bearish engulfing happens in an uptrend when a massive red candle engulfs the previous green one. Sellers take over.
Let's take Bitcoin as an example. Imagine the price drops from $50,000 to $45,000 over a week. The last red candle closes at $45,000. The next day, a large green candle opens at $44,800 and rises to $46,200, completely engulfing the red one. This is a classic engulfing signal. Traders see this as a sign that the downtrend is losing strength.
But here’s the thing: not all engulfing patterns are worth it. You need to check a few things before jumping in. First, verify that it’s really at the end of a strong trend. Then, see if it occurs near an important support or resistance level. The higher the volume on this engulfing candle, the more reliable the signal.
When I trade a bullish engulfing, I usually enter near the close of the candle, place my stop-loss below the bottom of the formation, and target the next resistance level with a risk/reward ratio of at least 2:1. For a bearish engulfing, it’s the opposite: stop above the high, target the next support.
What mistakes should you avoid? Trading every engulfing you see. That’s the biggest mistake. Context is everything. Don’t ignore the overall market view, always use a stop-loss, and wait for confirmation before entering. A strong second candle following the pattern can really validate the signal.
Engulfing patterns work especially well on cryptocurrencies if you combine them with volume analysis and key levels. It’s not a magic strategy, but it’s a solid tool if you use it correctly alongside other technical indicators.