I've been observing for some time how many traders in crypto communities talk about patterns without truly understanding what they are seeing on their charts. Today I want to share something about the hammer candle, a pattern that appears more frequently than most believe.



Basically, a hammer candle is that formation you see at the end of a strong decline. It has a small body, which can be green or red, but what makes it special is that long lower shadow, much longer than the body itself. The upper shadow is practically nonexistent or very short. When you see this, something interesting is happening in the market.

What it really means is that after sellers pushed the price down, buyers stepped in strongly and pushed it back up. That’s what the long lower shadow and then the close at the top indicate. It’s as if the market is rejecting lower prices. Especially at support levels or when something is oversold, this hammer candle can be a sign that momentum is shifting.

Now, here’s the important part many forget: this signal needs confirmation. You can’t just see a hammer candle and jump into trading. You need to see what happens afterward, how the price moves in the following candles. If a strong bullish move follows, then you have something. If the price keeps falling, then the hammer candle was just a temporary rebound.

There’s also a cousin of this pattern called the inverted hammer. The difference is quite obvious: the normal hammer has that long shadow downward, while the inverted one has it upward. It’s practically the opposite, and it can appear in different contexts.

My advice after seeing this in thousands of charts: never use the hammer candle alone. Combine it with other indicators, resistance and support levels, volume, whatever you use in your analysis. Trading involves real risks, so verify everything you can before making a decision. A nice hammer candle doesn’t guarantee anything, but it is another tool in your arsenal when you know how to interpret it correctly.
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