Just noticed something interesting about chart patterns that a lot of traders seem to miss. There's this formation called the bart pattern that shows up pretty regularly if you're paying attention to price action. It's basically this distinctive shape where you see a sharp spike up, then the price sits around consolidating for a bit with minimal movement, and then boom—it drops right back down to where it started. The whole thing kind of traces out a silhouette if you squint at it.



Here's the thing though. When the bart pattern forms, it's usually telling you something important about what's happening under the hood. Most of the time it signals either market manipulation or that the buying pressure just isn't strong enough to sustain the move. That initial spike gets exhausted, and the whole thing unwinds back to baseline.

I've been watching this play out on Bitcoin, Solana, and Ethereum charts for a while now, and the pattern is consistent. Once you spot it forming—especially during that consolidation phase—you start getting decent opportunities to position for the inevitable pullback. That's where the real edge is. You're not trying to catch the top or bottom, just waiting for the bart pattern to complete and then trading the reversal.

Obviously this isn't a guaranteed money printer. No single pattern ever is. You need to combine this with solid risk management and understand that technical analysis works best when you're not overleveraging. But once you train your eye to recognize the bart pattern and what it's signaling, it becomes a useful tool in your toolkit. Worth adding to your analysis if you haven't already.
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