Hammer and Shooting Star Effectiveness in Trend Contexts
Hammer and shooting star effectiveness depends on trend context: a hammer in an uptrend pullback is high-probability continuation; in a downtrend it differs.
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Hammer and Shooting Star Effectiveness in Trend Contexts
The same hammer candle means different things in different trend contexts. Treating every hammer as a reversal is the most common candlestick error. Effectiveness depends on where the pattern forms relative to the prevailing trend.
The trend-context rule
Classify the trend first (price above rising 20-EMA = uptrend; below falling 20-EMA = downtrend; chopping = range). Then interpret the hammer or shooting star by context.
Hammer in an uptrend (continuation)
A hammer forming during a pullback in an uptrend is a continuation signal, not a reversal. Buyers stepped in at the pullback low.
- Setup: uptrend intact, price pulls back to the 20-EMA or a prior support. A hammer prints (long lower wick ≥2× body, small upper wick).
- Entry: on the next candle's break above the hammer's high. Stop: 1 tick below the hammer's low. Target: the prior swing high, then a measured move equal to the prior leg.
- Hit rate: continuation hammers in uptrends test at roughly 60–65% — among the most reliable hammer setups.
Hammer in a downtrend (counter-trend reversal)
A hammer at the end of an extended downtrend is a reversal signal — but weaker than the continuation version.
- Setup: 5+ candles down, price at a major support. Hammer prints on volume ≥1.3× average.
- Entry: on break above the hammer's high. Stop: below the hammer's low. Target: the nearest resistance or 1:1 measured move.
- Hit rate: lower (~45–50%). Demand a second confirmation — a bullish engulfing on the next candle or a break of a nearby lower-high.
Shooting star in a downtrend (continuation)
A shooting star during a rally in a downtrend is a continuation signal — sellers rejected the rally.
- Entry: on break below the shooting star's low. Stop: above the star's high. Target: the prior swing low.
Shooting star in an uptrend (reversal)
A shooting star at the top of an extended uptrend is a reversal signal — but demand confluence.
- Setup: 5+ candles up, at resistance. Shooting star (long upper wick ≥2× body) on elevated volume.
- Entry: on break below the star's low. Stop: above the star's high. Target: nearest support.
- Hit rate: ~45–50% alone; rises to 60%+ with RSI divergence or volume climax.
Filters that raise effectiveness
- Wick-to-body ratio ≥ 2:1: smaller wicks are not hammers/stars.
- Volume ≥1.2× average on the signal candle.
- Location at a level: hammer at 20-EMA, prior support, or pivot; star at resistance, pivot, or RSI >70.
- No immediate gap against the signal: if the next candle gaps beyond the pattern's extreme, the signal failed.
The context principle
A hammer is a one-candle expression of rejection at a price. Its meaning is determined by what price was rejecting — a pullback low in an uptrend (continuation) or a downtrend's exhaustion low (reversal). Read the trend first, the candle second. The candle confirms the context; it does not override it.
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