Harami and Doji Combination Patterns
When a harami's inside candle is itself a doji, the combined formation signals acute indecision that often precedes meaningful reversals at structural levels.
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Harami and Doji Combination Patterns
The harami and the doji are individually useful candlestick signals. Combined — a harami whose inside candle is a doji — they form a more potent formation that captures a specific market condition: a sudden collapse of momentum after a directional move. Understanding when and why this combination works separates high-probability setups from noise.
The Component Patterns
Harami — a long mother candle followed by a small-bodied inside candle whose range is entirely contained within the mother candle's body. The pattern signals that the prior trend's momentum has stalled.
Doji — a candle where open and close are virtually identical, producing a cross or plus shape. It represents pure indecision between buyers and sellers.
The Combination: Harami Cross
When the inside candle of a harami is a doji, the formation is called a harami cross. The structure is:
- A long trend candle (bullish or bearish).
- A doji whose entire range sits within the prior body.
The interpretation: the dominant side pushed price decisively, then immediately lost control. The doji is the market refusing to commit in the prior direction. Statistically, this combination produces reversals more often than a plain harami because the doji adds a second layer of indecision evidence.
Where the Combination Works
The harami cross is most reliable:
- After an extended trend — at least five to seven candles in one direction. A cross after two candles is meaningless.
- At major structure — daily pivots, prior swing highs/lows, moving averages, or Fibonacci retracement zones. The cross alone is weak; the cross at structure is the trade.
- On higher timeframes — daily and H4 patterns carry weight; M5 and M15 versions are routinely noise.
- With volume confirmation — the mother candle ideally forms on elevated volume, while the doji forms on reduced volume, confirming that participation faded rather than reversed outright.
Entry and Management
A conservative execution:
- Entry: On a break of the doji's high (bullish harami cross, signaling reversal up) or low (bearish harami cross). Entering on the doji close itself is premature.
- Stop: Just beyond the mother candle's extreme — if the mother candle's high or low is breached, the reversal thesis is invalid.
- Target: The nearest structural level in the reversal direction, or a measured move equal to the mother candle's range.
Common Failure Modes
The harami cross fails predictably when:
- The mother candle is not actually long — a small mother candle produces a meaningless inside doji.
- The doji forms in the middle of a range, with no trend to reverse.
- Price gaps beyond the mother candle's extreme on the next session, invalidating the structure.
- Traders enter on the doji itself rather than waiting for confirmation.
The Pitfall of Over-Reading
Not every doji inside a candle is a harami cross worth trading. The pattern's value comes from the contrast between a committed mother candle and an indecisive doji. When the mother candle is itself modest, or when the doji is merely one of several small candles in a chop, the signal carries little weight. The advanced trader reserves the harami cross for clean, extended-trend contexts at structural levels.
Used with discipline, the harami cross offers a defined-risk entry into reversals at the exact moment momentum collapses — a combination few single-candle patterns can match.
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