Just realized something interesting about how many traders are sleeping on the morning star candlestick pattern. Seriously, if you're into technical analysis, this one deserves way more attention.



So here's the thing: the morning star candlestick shows up when the market's been beaten down pretty hard. You get this strong bearish candle first, then suddenly the second candle appears small and indecisive, usually a doji. That's when the weakness kicks in. But then boom—the third candle comes in aggressive and bullish, and that's your signal that something's shifting. This is literally the market showing you it's about to reverse.

I've been watching this pattern work across different timeframes, and there's actual research backing it up. A study by Park and Irwin in the Journal of Financial Markets looked at various candlestick patterns, and the morning star candlestick specifically showed around 65% success rate in catching bullish reversals. That's not bad odds for a technical setup.

Now, practically speaking, how do you actually trade this? After that third bullish candle closes above the midpoint of the first bearish candle, that's when you know the downtrend is genuinely reversing. Buyers are in control now. I usually wait for confirmation on the next candle too—safer that way. Entry is straightforward: right after the reversal candle or when you get that follow-up green candle.

Stop losses? Put them below the doji or below that third candle's low. Keeps your risk tight. For targets, I look at the previous resistance or just use a simple 1:2 or 1:3 risk-reward ratio. Exit if the price shows weakness or a bearish pattern forms.

The pattern itself is pretty clean: downtrend, then indecision with that small candle, then boom—strong bullish reversal. That's your morning star candlestick at work. When you spot it, the expectation is clear—price goes up. It's a buy signal, not a sell. The market's literally showing you the transition from down to up.

If you're building your technical analysis toolkit, definitely add this one. It's reliable enough that I keep it in my regular scanning routine.
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