I've been noticing more traders talking about gap formations lately, and honestly, the rising window candlestick pattern is one of those signals that can really help you catch continuation moves in a bullish trend.



So here's the thing—a rising window forms when there's a clear gap between yesterday's high and today's low. No overlap whatsoever. The new candle opens way above the previous candle's high, and that's where the magic happens. That gap is basically screaming that demand is strong, that buyers came in and said "we're not waiting for yesterday's price."

What makes this bullish? It's the psychology behind it. You might have had some mixed market action before, maybe a subtle uptrend building. Then boom—the gap appears, often triggered by positive news or strong earnings. The market gaps up, and if you see that happening, it usually means the momentum is real. Buyers are firmly in control.

But here's the critical part that a lot of people miss: the rising window candlestick pattern only stays valid if that gap doesn't get filled. I'm serious about this. If future candles close that gap, you've lost the bullish implication. The pattern breaks. That's why you see experienced traders watching these gaps so carefully—once it's filled, the momentum can shift pretty fast.

The way to trade this? Watch for the gap formation, confirm that prices are continuing higher without filling it back in, and that's your signal that the uptrend is likely to keep running. If the gap holds, you're looking at real continuation potential. If it closes? That's when you need to reconsider your bias.

I've seen this play out on multiple timeframes with various assets, and it's one of those reliable technical patterns that's worth keeping in your playbook. Just remember—no fill, no problem. Gap gets filled, momentum weakens. That's the key to reading this one right.
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