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I just reviewed a pattern that many traders overlook: the bearish hammer candle. It's interesting because although it resembles other patterns, its context is completely different, and that's what makes it valuable.
Basically, a hammer candle works in any market, not just crypto. Stocks, indices, forex, all of them work. The idea is simple: identify where the trend might change. But here’s the key: the context is everything.
When we talk about the bearish hammer candle, we refer to two forms: the hanging man or the shooting star. Both appear after an uptrend and suggest that the price could reverse downward. The bearish hammer forms when the opening price is above the closing price, leaving a long wick that shows rejection of higher prices.
Now, how do you read a candle in the first place? Each candle has a body (the distance between open and close) and wicks (the extremes showing highs and lows). A hammer has a small body and a long lower wick, at least twice the size of the body. That’s what identifies it.
The bearish hammer, like the hanging man, shows selling pressure. Sellers push the price down, but buyers try to recover it. At close, the sellers win. It’s a sign that the uptrend might be exhausted. The shooting star is similar but inverted: the long wick is on top, showing that buyers tried to push the price higher but failed.
What I like about this is that you can use it on any timeframe. Day trading, swing trading, long-term analysis. The bearish hammer works in all. But here’s the warning: don’t use this alone. Never.
Most novice traders see a bearish hammer and immediately go short. Mistake. You need to confirm with other indicators. Moving averages, trend lines, RSI, MACD, Fibonacci. When you combine the bearish hammer with these tools, then you have something solid.
The strengths are clear: it works across multiple markets, multiple timeframes, and is easy to identify once you know what to look for. The weaknesses are also obvious: it depends on the context, there’s no guarantee, and without additional confirmation it’s almost useless.
One thing that confuses many is the difference with Doji. A Doji opens and closes at the same price, with no real body. A bearish hammer has a body. Doji generally indicates indecision, while the bearish hammer suggests a specific reversal.
In the end, the bearish hammer is a useful tool, but it’s just a tool. Use it as part of a larger system. Implement proper risk management, use stop-losses, and always consider volume and market context before making decisions. It’s not a guaranteed buy or sell signal, but when combined correctly, it can give you real advantages in trading.