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How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals

Article Summary: Like most candlestick formation patterns, the Harami tells a story about real time sentiment in the market. After the pattern is composed with the closing of the signal candle, then you can look to the following candle to identify a clear bias and risk points.

Japanese Candlestick charting is older than many markets and due to their tenure, they are quite popular. If you’re new to Candlestick charting, it is an excellent technique that studies the real body or open and close relationship to the shadows or high and low to judge real time sentiment that can be applied on all time frames and markets. We even offer a free course that you can access here to understand the main points of trading Forex with this form of visual analysis.

Learn Forex: Japanese Candlestick Analysis

Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Candlestick.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals
Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Candlestick.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals

(Courtesy of Fxwords.com)

Candlestick trading signals are usually divided into reversal or continuation patterns. Continuation patterns can help you see when the sentiment is likely to keep the prevailing trend going strong. Reversal patterns are very popular for trading and help you recognize when the sentiment that was behind a trend potentially ceases as the pair flips its direction.

When you begin studying candlestick trading to pinpoint market turning points, you are quickly introduced to the Doji Candlestick. The most common principle and first lesson is that when you notice the Doji Candlestick, you should be on guard as it can often show you that a reversal is pending and an opportune time for you to enter. Although Doji’s are only composed of one candle that open and closes at near the same level and an upper and lower wick out of the body like a “+” sign, the next candle tells the story as to the trade preference you should have.

Learn Forex: Doji’s and the Following Candle Gives You a Trading Bias

Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Picture_4.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals
Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Picture_4.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals

(Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

Once a Doji forms, it’s helpful to note other oscillating indicators or moving averages to find if the pair is in an extreme condition or near support because this is when Candlestick formations are most potent. If you’re not familiar with indicators that can help you spot extreme conditions or trend support / resistance, here is an introduction to four highly effective indicators that every trader should know. You can use either of those indicators to increase the effectiveness of candlestick entries.

The Powerful Harami Doji

Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Picture_7.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals
Harami_Reversal_Pattern_body_Picture_7.png, How the Harami Candlestick Pattern Can Help You Catch Reversals

(Created using FXCM’s Marketscope 2.0 charts)

The Harami is a powerful Doji pattern because it looks at each candle on either side of the Doji to give you the full picture. The first candle, before the Doji which is highlighted and red above, should be in the direction of the immediate trend and the real body will be larger than the body of the Doji. The third candle, after the Doji will either confirm the reversal if it moves against the first candle or nullify the Harami signal if the immediate trend continues after the Doji.