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Chart Patterns

Vincent Mao
In this lesson, I'll present you with a methodology to trade potential trend reversals. This method of identifying and trading potential reversals is nothing new. It's a comprehensive method that incorporates price, pattern, and time. (more)
Dan Chesler
Let Dan Chesler show you how to trade his "stoch-trap" setup, as well as his "incipient trend pattern." (more)
Daniel Beighley
A bull trap occurs when the price of a stock moves above a resistance line, triggering buy signals, but then quickly reverses course, 'trapping' with losses those who went long. (more)
Daniel Beighley
Nothing is ever a given in the markets. The markets will do whatever they do, but sometimes it is a good idea to take a step back and take a look at the -- really -- big picture. (more)
Daniel Beighley
In keeping with the Point and Figure tradition of simplicity, this lesson will go through four effective patterns used to interpret this charting system. (more)
Alan Farley
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. (more)
Daniel Beighley
Point and Figure charts are the oldest form of Western technical analysis and can be a tool to keep your judgment clear of the 'noise' that builds up from constant analysis. (more)
Carolyn Lueck
In this lesson, I'd like to share a candlestick pattern that I watch for quite frequently in my trading: the Evening Star formation. (more)
Tsutae Kamada
In this lesson, I show you how effectively "Hammer" and "Hanging Man" candlestick formations can be at providing us with reversal signals -- especially when they appear in important price areas. (more)
Goran Yordanoff
As Japanese candlestick method puts great significance on the relationship between opening price and closing price, the tail is an extremely important occurrence when analyzing charts because it reveals an area of price that was visited during the time frame under analysis, but was unsustainable (more)
Tsutae Kamada
Traders can be so busy looking for daytrading opportunities that they become trapped in short-term frames. A bigger picture can be a great help in focusing on your destination. (more)
Dave Landry
With picking stocks using discretionary patterns, it's more important to choose those that fit the concept and designer's intent rather than those that fit the exact rules. (more)
Loren Fleckenstein
Traders have long known that many buy-side chart patterns can be inverted to time short entries. For even better results, we've also learned to turn the fundamental picture on its head as well: weak or deteriorating corporate performance for shorts vs. strong or improving fundamentals for longs. (more)
Tsutae Kamada
Can you trust daily chart patterns more than five-minute chart patterns? Are long-term charts more reliable than short-term charts? In this lesson, I discuss the benefits of multiple time-frame charts -- especially the effective use of longer-term charts -- for short-term trading. (more)
Goran Yordanoff
We review a recent swing trade that utilized the "hidden" message of gaps (more)
Gary Kaltbaum
When a stock gaps up or down, I believe this is the most significant sign of accumulation or distribution. (more)
Tsutae Kamada
As a long-time user of candlestick charts, I believe candlestick charts are more visually oriented than bar charts. In this lesson I would like to show how effective candlestick charts are -- when used with other technical tools. (more)
Dave Landry
If you want to make a long-term living trading stocks on a short-term basis you must learn how to play both sides of the market. In this lesson, I'll show how patterns that I use on the long side work, in reverse, on the short side. (more)
Loren Fleckenstein
More than once, finance profs have told me that chart patterns don't work. After all, why should the market obey a chart pattern? (more)
Loren Fleckenstein
You don't need to be an options trader to take advantage of extremes in crowd sentiment. The climax run represents a critical selling stage where the trader can sidestep steep losses and lock in a rare windfall before a highflier breaks apart. (more)
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