Kicker and Window (Gap) Candlestick Patterns
Kicker and Window are gap-based patterns: kicker signals sharp sentiment reversal with no overlap; the Japanese Window treats gaps as support and resistance.
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Kicker and Window (Gap) Candlestick Patterns
Both Kicker and Window are built on gaps — price openings that do not overlap the prior candle's range. These patterns turn gap-based sentiment shifts into tradeable structures.
The Kicker pattern
A kicker is a two-candle reversal with a gap and a color change:
- Bullish kicker: a bearish candle followed by a bullish candle that gaps up — opening above the prior candle's high — and closes near its high. No overlap between the two candles' ranges.
- Bearish kicker: a bullish candle followed by a bearish candle that gaps down, opening below the prior low, closing near its low.
The kicker signals an abrupt sentiment flip — news, earnings, or an overnight order imbalance that reversed control with no ambiguity.
Trading rules:
- Entry: on the kicker candle's close (the gap candle). Do not wait — the gap is the signal.
- Stop: beyond the first candle's extreme (below the bearish candle's low for bullish kicker).
- Target: measured move equal to the first candle's range projected from the kicker close, minimum 2:1 R:R.
- Filter: kicker candle volume ≥1.5× average. A kicker on thin volume is a low-participation gap — suspect.
The Window (Japanese gap)
In Japanese candlestick theory, a gap is called a Window — and Windows act as support or resistance until filled. Three rules govern them:
- A Window up is support: price tends to return to the upper edge of an up-gap and bounce. Buy the retest of the gap's upper edge.
- A Window down is resistance: price tends to return to the lower edge of a down-gap and reject. Sell the retest.
- A filled Window loses its power: once price closes back through the gap, the Window is nullified.
Trading the Window retest:
- Entry: on a reversal candle at the gap's edge (hammer at the top of an up-gap, shooting star at the bottom of a down-gap).
- Stop: 1 tick inside the gap (beyond the edge being tested). If the gap fills, exit.
- Target: the prior swing high/low or 1:1 measured move.
Kicker vs Window
| Property | Kicker | Window |
|---|---|---|
| Candles | 2 | Any gap |
| Signal | Reversal | Support/resistance |
| Entry timing | Immediate (gap candle close) | On retest |
| Holding period | Short (1–3 candles) | Until filled or target |
Common mistakes
- Treating every gap as a Window that holds: thin gaps on low volume fill immediately. Require the gap to be ≥0.3×ATR wide and on ≥1.3× average volume.
- Chasing the kicker without a stop: kickers can reverse on gap-fade. Always use the stop beyond the first candle.
- Ignoring the HTF trend: a bullish kicker against a strong downtrend is often a gap-fade trap.
Gaps reveal sentiment. The kicker trades the flip; the Window trades the retest. Both require volume and trend alignment to separate real gaps from noise.
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