88% found this document useful (8 votes)
23K views

CRT Pattern

The document summarizes 10 common chart patterns that professional traders should know: 1) Head and shoulders, 2) Inverse head and shoulders, 3) Double bottom, 4) Double top, 5) Cup and handle, 6) Rounding top, 7) Rounding bottom, 8) Ascending triangle, 9) Descending triangle, and 10) Rising and falling wedges. Each pattern is described in 1-2 sentences focusing on its shape, meaning (bullish or bearish), and trading strategy.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
88% found this document useful (8 votes)
23K views

CRT Pattern

The document summarizes 10 common chart patterns that professional traders should know: 1) Head and shoulders, 2) Inverse head and shoulders, 3) Double bottom, 4) Double top, 5) Cup and handle, 6) Rounding top, 7) Rounding bottom, 8) Ascending triangle, 9) Descending triangle, and 10) Rising and falling wedges. Each pattern is described in 1-2 sentences focusing on its shape, meaning (bullish or bearish), and trading strategy.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 10

10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 1 - Head and shoulders

The popularity of this pattern is mainly attributed to the fact that it is easier to spot than other
patterns.
The head and shoulders pattern tries to predict a reversal. Characterised by a large peak with
two smaller peaks on either side, all three levels fall back to the same support level as the
neckline. The trend is then likely to break out in a downward motion.
Its name comes from what the pattern looks like: a head and two shoulders (and a neckline).
With this pattern, you would enter a short or sell trade below the neckline and a stop around
halfway between the second shoulder. The target move would be around the distance between
the head (peak) and neckline.

14
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 2 - Inverse head and shoulders

The inverse head and shoulders or reverse bottom is a bullish pattern and indicates that sellers
have been exhausted. You would enter a long trade just above the neckline and a stop towards
the recent low of the second shoulder. The target would be a continuation of the head move
giving a fairly good risk-to-reward potential.

15
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 3 - Double bottom

A double bottom looks similar to the letter W and indicates when the price has made two
unsuccessful attempts at breaking through the support level. It is a reversal chart pattern as
it highlights a trend reversal. After unsuccessfully breaking through the support twice, the
market price shifts towards an uptrend. You will also see triple bottoms play out.
Here we see the initial decline and attempt to rally, a second decline, which does not go below
the first decline, forming support. You would buy just above the neckline and stop towards the
middle of the up move, with a target at the same level that the initial decline started at.

16
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 4 - Double top

Opposite of a double bottom, a double top looks like the letter M. The trend enters a reversal
phase after failing to break through the resistance level twice. If the price fails to move higher,
then it is likely to go back to the neckline, which is support. If it fails there, it will move lower
back down to the lows of the recent move. In this type of setup, you would look to take a short
trade with a stop above the neckline, and your target would be the recent lows.
It’s worth adding that you will also find multiple bottoms (support) or tops (resistance) in
markets, so you could see a triple top or triple bottom.

17
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 5 - Cup & handle

The cup and handle is a continuation stock chart pattern that signals a bullish market trend.
It is the same as the rounding bottom or saucer (also a pattern worth looking out for) but
features a handle after the rounding bottom. The handle resembles a flag or pennant and once
completed, you can see the market break out in a bullish upwards trend.
The handle is a temporary retracement pattern and breaks out to continue the move higher.
This pattern can be fairly rare and takes time to complete; however, the upside move can be
fairly explosive. The move-up is often the same distance as the cup height, so once the handle
completes the next move higher, it gives us a target move of the same distance as the cup.

18
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 6 - Rounding top

A rounding top usually indicates a bearish downward trend. It tends to show that the market is
losing strength, with each high being lower than the previous one. We then see a move through
the neckline as support fails, then we see a smaller retest (bounce) back to the neckline before
a larger fall. The fall is normally the same distance as the recent high to the neckline. I have
often seen this pattern in cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.

19
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 7 - Rounding bottom

The flip side of the rounding top is the rounding bottom, which is a bullish pattern. The market
is in a downtrend but then starts to make a series of lows, higher than the previous ones, which
form the rounded bottom or saucer. We then break out of the cup and move higher.
You would look to buy around the halfway point of the formation of the U shape or once the
breakout occurs.
A rounded bottom can take weeks to form, but you can use a stock screening site to identify
a selection of stocks and markets that make this pattern and add them to your watch list. You
would only open trades once you are heading to the breakout point.
This is very similar to the cup and handle pattern previously covered.

20
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 8 - Ascending triangle

The ascending triangle is a bilateral pattern meaning that the price could break out from either
side. A breakout is likely where the triangle lines converge. To draw this pattern, you need to
place a horizontal line (the resistance line) on the resistance points and draw an ascending line
(the uptrend line) along the support points. This pattern shows the price moving into smaller
and smaller ranges before the big break out. Your buy entry would be just above the resistance,
with a target the same distance as the triangle’s height.
For the sell entry, you would do the exact opposite, sell below the support line, and expect a
drop of at least the triangle’s height.

21
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 9 - Descending triangle

The descending triangle is a bilateral pattern, meaning that the price could break out from
either side. A breakout is likely where the triangle lines converge. To draw this pattern, you
need to place a horizontal line (the support line) on the support points and draw a descending
line (the downtrend line) along the resistance points. This pattern is the exact opposite of the
ascending triangle previously covered.
This pattern shows the price moving into smaller and smaller ranges before the big breakout.
Your sell entry would be just below the support line, with a target the same distance as the
triangle’s height.
For the buy entry, you would do the exact opposite, buy above the resistance line and expect a
rise of at least the height of the triangle. You can place a stop just below the resistance line.

22
10 Chart Patterns Every Pro Trader Should Know

Pattern 10 - Wedges: rising and falling

Our final patterns are wedges, and we will deal with rising and falling wedges.

Rising wedge
Wedge patterns are normally reversal patterns. A rising wedge occurs when the price makes
multiple swings to new highs, yet the price waves are getting smaller. Essentially, the price
action is moving in an uptrend, but contracting price action shows that the upward momentum
is slowing down. Eventually, the price breaks out, and in the case of the rising wedge, the price
moves lower.
You would enter a stop just above the wedge, and you would enter short. Place your sell trade
just below. The target would be a move-up of the same distance as the height of where the
wedge started.

Falling wedge
The falling wedge is a bullish pattern that begins wide at the top and contracts as prices move
lower. The trading range becomes tighter and tighter until it breaks out. In the case of the
falling wedge, the price normally breaks higher, so it is a bullish pattern. You would have a stop,
as shown on the chart just below the wedge. You would buy just as we break out of the pattern
and then look for a target of the same distance as the height of where the wedge started. Take
care as many confuse a falling wedge with a bearish pattern.

23

You might also like