These screeners are based on well-known candlestick chart patterns used in technical analysis. Each pattern reflects market psychology and highlights how buyers and sellers behaved during specific trading sessions, helping traders spot potential reversals or trend continuation.
Forms when the open and close are near the same level with a long lower shadow. It indicates strong rejection of lower prices and a possible bullish reversal.
A strong bullish candle with no upper or lower wicks, showing buyers were in control throughout the session from open to close.
Appears after a decline and has a long lower shadow with a small real body, indicating buyers stepped in strongly after selling pressure.
Forms after a downtrend with a long upper shadow, showing buyers attempted a reversal despite prior selling pressure.
A three-candle reversal pattern consisting of a strong bearish candle, a small-bodied candle, and a strong bullish candle, signalling a shift in momentum.
A rare three-day pattern where a doji is sandwiched between a gap-down bearish candle and a gap-up bullish candle, indicating a sharp bullish reversal.
A small bullish candle forms completely within the body of a prior large bearish candle, suggesting selling pressure is weakening.
Similar to a Bullish Harami, but the second candle is a doji, showing strong indecision and a possible trend reversal.
A bullish candle opens lower than the previous bearish close but closes above its midpoint, indicating buyers are regaining control.
Three consecutive long bullish candles with higher closes, confirming sustained buying momentum.
A bearish Marubozu followed by a bullish Marubozu with a gap up, signalling an abrupt and powerful shift in sentiment.
A small-bodied candle with a long upper shadow appearing after an uptrend, indicating rejection of higher prices.
Occurs after an uptrend and has a long lower shadow, warning that selling pressure may be building despite higher prices.
A strong bearish candle with no wicks, showing sellers controlled the session from open to close.
A large bearish candle fully engulfs the previous bullish candle, signalling a potential trend reversal.
A small bearish candle forms within the body of a prior bullish candle, indicating weakening buying momentum.
A doji appears within the body of a previous bullish candle, reflecting strong indecision and possible reversal.
A bearish candle opens above the previous close but closes below the midpoint of the prior bullish candle.
A gap-up doji followed by a gap-down bearish candle, indicating a sharp bearish reversal.
Three consecutive bearish candles with similar size, each closing lower, confirming strong selling pressure.
A bullish continuation pattern where a small bearish candle fails to fill the gap between two bullish candles.
A bearish continuation pattern where a small bullish candle fails to fill the gap between two bearish candles.
A candle where open and close prices are nearly equal, reflecting market indecision. Its meaning depends on surrounding price action.
| Scenario | Explanation |
|---|---|
| The pattern appears but volume is low | Low volume reduces reliability. Confirm the signal using volume or other indicators. |
| Multiple patterns appear together | Confluence between patterns often strengthens the signal. |
| Other screeners show opposite signals | Use confirmation from trend, momentum, or volume before acting. |
Last updated: 18 Dec 2025