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Failed Chart Patterns: How to Respond

Recognize failed chart patterns early and respond with pre-defined rules to convert pattern failures into profitable counter-trades.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#chart-patterns#technicals
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Failed Chart Patterns: How to Respond

Patterns fail 30-50% of the time. The failed pattern is not a loss to be tolerated — it is a signal in the opposite direction. Traders who pre-define failure rules turn the 40% of patterns that fail into a separate, profitable strategy.

What a Failed Pattern Is

A pattern fails when price breaks in the expected direction, then reverses back through the invalidation level within 5-10 candles. The failure is confirmed by a close back inside (or beyond) the pattern's defining boundary.

Examples:

  • Head and shoulders top: neckline break, then close back above the neckline.
  • Triangle breakout: break of the boundary, then close back inside the triangle.
  • Double top: neckline break, then close back above the neckline.
  • Flag: breakout, then close back inside the flag channel.

The failure is a confirmed event, not a momentary wick.

Why Failures Are Tradable

When a pattern fails, the traders who entered on the original breakout are trapped. Their stops cluster just beyond the invalidation level; once triggered, the stop orders fuel the reversal. This is why failed patterns often produce faster, larger moves than the original pattern would have — the trapped-position unwind is forced buying/selling.

Backtested data on liquid US equities: failed head and shoulders produce moves 1.3-1.8x the original measured target, in the opposite direction, 60-70% of the time.

The Response Rules

  1. Recognize the failure early. The close back inside the pattern is the trigger — not the wick, not the intraday move.
  2. Exit the original position immediately at market. Do not "give it room."
  3. Reverse position size: if the original trade was 1% risk, the failure trade is 1% risk in the opposite direction.
  4. Stop: beyond the original breakout extreme (the high of the false breakout for a failed top).
  5. Target: 1x the original pattern's measured move, in the opposite direction. Failed patterns often exceed this.

The Failed-Failure Trap

Not every reversal back inside a pattern is a true failure. Two filters:

  • Volume on the failure candle should be 1.2-1.5x average — trapped traders are real.
  • The close back inside must be decisive (not a marginal close at the boundary).

Marginal closes back inside the pattern, on low volume, are usually continuation pauses — the original pattern reasserts within 2-3 candles. Wait for the decisive close.

Pre-Trade Failure Plan

Before entering any pattern trade, write:

  • Invalidation level (where the pattern fails).
  • Failure response: exit + reverse, or exit only.
  • Failure stop and target.

A pattern trade without a failure plan is a bet, not a strategy.

Common Errors

  • Holding the original position "to see if it recovers" — it will not.
  • Reversing without the decisive close; marginal reversals are noise.
  • Sizing the failure trade larger than the original — revenge sizing. Equal risk only.

Traders who respond with rules turn the failure rate into a second edge.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk