Candlestick Failure Signals and Fake Reversals
Candlestick patterns fail and produce fake reversals; spotting failure early — gap, no follow-through — lets you exit and trade failure-of-failure.
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Candlestick Failure Signals and Fake Reversals
Every candlestick pattern fails sometimes. The edge is in recognizing failure fast, exiting, and sometimes trading the reversal of the failed reversal. The failure-of-failure is often a stronger signal than the original pattern.
What constitutes failure
A candlestick pattern fails when price does the opposite of its implication within a defined window. Failure criteria:
- Hammer/shooting star failure: the next candle closes beyond the pattern's signal wick (below a hammer's low, above a star's high) within 2 candles.
- Engulfing failure: the next candle closes beyond the engulfing candle's extreme on the wrong side.
- Harami failure: price closes beyond the mother candle's extreme — the stall became continuation.
- Doji failure: the next candle gaps or closes through the doji's range against the expected direction.
The window is short — usually 1–3 candles. If price has not confirmed the pattern by then, it has likely failed.
Early warning signs
Before full failure, watch for:
- No follow-through: the candle after the pattern is small and indecisive — the reversal has no momentum.
- Volume collapse: the pattern candle had volume, but the next candle drops to <0.7× average. Participation vanished.
- Wick against the reversal: the confirmation candle leaves a wick against the reversal direction — the opposite side is still defending.
- Gap against the pattern: the next session opens beyond the pattern's extreme. This is immediate failure.
The failure response
When a pattern fails:
- Exit immediately on the close that triggers the failure criteria. Do not hope for recovery — the pattern's premise is invalid.
- Reverse if conditions align: a failed reversal often continues in the original trend direction. The trapped reversal traders all exit together, fueling the move.
The failure-of-failure trade
When a bullish reversal pattern fails and price closes below it, the original downtrend has resumed with extra fuel — the failed reversal trapped counter-trend buyers who must now sell.
Setup:
- A bullish reversal pattern forms in a downtrend (already suspect — counter-trend).
- The pattern fails: price closes below the hammer's low / engulfing candle's low within 2 candles.
- Enter short on the failure candle's close.
- Stop: 1 tick above the failed pattern's extreme.
- Target: the prior swing low extended, or 1:1 measured move. Minimum 2:1 R:R.
Mirror for failed bearish reversals in an uptrend — go long on the failure.
Rules to avoid being the trapped trader
- Never trade candlestick reversals against the higher-timeframe trend without a second confirmation. Most failed reversals are counter-trend attempts.
- Always define the failure level before entry: know exactly which price closes the pattern out.
- Use the failure level as your stop, not a wider arbitrary distance. A tight, pattern-based stop keeps risk small and offers strong R:R on the failure-of-failure.
Candlestick patterns are probabilities. Define failure, exit fast, and let the failed reversal reveal the stronger side. The failure is often the better trade.
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