Recently, someone in the group was asking about candlestick patterns, and I remembered the marubozu candle, which honestly is one of the most useful patterns I've learned in trading.



The term comes from Japanese and literally means "bald," which makes sense when you see the candle. The main characteristic is that it has no shadows, neither upper nor lower. You only see the real body of the candle, without the lines that normally appear above and below. This is what makes it so special and easy to identify.

The marubozu candle appears in two variants. When it's bullish, the candle is green and indicates that buyers had full control throughout the session. The price opened at a certain level, steadily rose, and closed strongly, with sellers unable to push it down. This is a pretty clear sign of optimism. If you see a bullish marubozu in an uptrend, it probably will continue higher. But if it appears in the middle of a decline, that's where it gets interesting because it indicates that the sentiment suddenly changed.

Then there's the opposite side, the bearish marubozu candle. It's red and means exactly the opposite: sellers had complete control. The price opened, fell throughout the session, and closed weakly. There were no serious attempts by buyers to recover ground. When you see this on a chart, you know there's real selling pressure.

What I like about this pattern is that it’s very precise. Unlike other patterns that are more ambiguous, the marubozu candle tells you exactly who was in control during that period. Buyers or sellers dominated completely. There’s no middle ground.

Now, the important part of trading with a marubozu candle is this: don’t trade just because you saw the pattern. Wait for additional confirmation, another candle or pattern that supports your idea. If you see a bullish marubozu, look to buy just above the closing price, and place your stop loss at the lowest price of that candle. It’s simple but effective.

What has worked for me is identifying these candles on higher timeframes first because they are more reliable there. And always, always wait for confirmation before entering. The pattern gives you the signal, but the market gives you the confirmation. That’s the difference between trading with discipline and trading randomly.
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