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I've been observing how many beginner traders struggle with candlestick patterns, so I wanted to share something that changed my way of trading: the pin bar.
This pin bar candle is probably one of the most reliable patterns you can learn, especially if you're just starting with technical analysis. I speak from personal experience.
So, what's the deal with the pin bar? Basically, it's a candle that shows you something very clear: the market moved in one direction, but then rebounded strongly. Someone (whether buyers or sellers) tried to push the price, but the market said "wait" and reversed. And that can be your signal that a trend change is coming or at least a strong reaction at an important level.
Visually, a pin bar candle has very specific characteristics that you can't confuse. The body is small, almost insignificant. But the tail (the shadow) on one side is quite long. On the other side, there's almost no shadow. And importantly: the close is near the edge, very close to the end of that long tail.
Let me give you real examples: if the price fell, then rebounded strongly upward and closed near the top, that's a bullish pin bar. The opposite would be a bearish pin bar: it moves up, bounces down, and closes near the bottom.
Now, here's the important part. When I see a pin bar candle on my charts, I also check what happened before. If just before there's a large candle that completely engulfs the pin bar, that's a warning sign. This is called engulfing, and it means the previous move is stronger than the reversal I'm seeing. In those cases, the market usually continues in the original direction, so it's better to stay out.
To trade correctly with this pin bar candle, I have a method that works well. First, I wait for the candle to close completely. I don't enter halfway through the candle. Then, on the next candle, I don't enter the market directly but place a limit order at the pin bar's opening price. That is, I wait for the retracement that should come.
Let's put some numbers: if the pin bar opened at 29,500 and closed at 30,000, I place my limit order at 29,500. The stop-loss I set just below the tail, say at 28,950. And I calculate the take-profit as 2 to 3 times the risk, or up to the nearest level.
One more thing I learned: I always consider where the MA30 (the 30-period moving average) is. If the pin bar is above the MA30, I look to trade upward. If it's below, I look to trade downward. And if the pin bar is against the moving average, I prefer not to enter unless it's a very strong level.
In summary, the pin bar is a reversal candle that allows you to enter at the opening price, capture the retracement, and follow the movement. But always be careful: if before the pin bar there was a large engulfing candle, the market might continue its previous move instead of reversing.
If you found this helpful, I have more simple trading setups that work. The idea is to understand price action without unnecessary complications.