Just been reviewing some classic chart patterns and the Adam and Eve pattern keeps showing up in my analysis. It's one of those reversal setups that's been around for ages but still works if you know what you're looking for.



So here's how it works - you get two peaks or two valleys that look pretty similar, but one is always slightly higher or lower than the other. That's where the names come from, right? The first peak (Adam) sits higher than the second one (Eve), and if you're looking at valleys, the first valley (Eve) dips lower than the second (Adam). Thomas Bulkowski documented this pattern extensively and found it had solid predictive power for catching reversals.

The key to actually trading this is waiting for the price action to break through what we call the neckline. This line connects the lowest points between Adam's peak and Eve's valley - it's basically your confirmation level. When price breaks above the neckline, you're looking at a shift from downtrend to uptrend. Break below it and you're seeing the opposite - uptrend flipping to downtrend.

I won't lie though, no pattern is bulletproof. The Adam and Eve pattern is reliable but you'll still get faked out sometimes. That's why I never rely on just one signal. Always layer it with other technical tools - moving averages, support resistance levels, volume confirmation, whatever fits your style.

Here's what I do when I spot this setup: First, I make sure it's actually part of my broader strategy, not just a random trade idea. Second, I wait for that neckline break - don't jump in early. Third, I confirm with other indicators before entering. Fourth, I set my stop loss immediately once I'm in the trade. And honestly, that's it. Simple, mechanical, no overthinking.

The Adam and Eve pattern has given me some solid reversal signals over the years. The wins come when you respect the pattern but also respect risk management. That's the real edge.
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