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Been trading for a while now and I've noticed that most traders completely miss out on the power of reversal patterns—honestly, it's one of the easiest ways to catch major market turns if you know what you're looking for.
Let me break down the patterns that actually work. The Head and Shoulders is probably the most reliable—basically three peaks where the middle one towers over the other two. The real money move happens when price finally breaks that neckline. Volume is your friend here; if you see aggressive selling during the breakdown, that's your confirmation signal.
Then you've got the Double Top and Double Bottom setups. Double Top is textbook bearish—price slams into resistance twice, can't break through, and then dumps. I usually wait for a clean break below support before shorting. The inverse is Double Bottom, which signals a reversal from downtrend to uptrend. MACD divergence works beautifully with this one.
If you want something with more conviction, look at Triple Top and Triple Bottom patterns. These are just the stronger versions—price tests the same level three times, and when it finally breaks, the move tends to be more powerful. I stick to higher timeframes for these (4-hour or daily) because the noise on lower timeframes will mess with your head.
Now, the Rounding Top and Rounding Bottom are subtly different—they're slower reversals, more like a gradual arc than a sharp rejection. Rounding Bottom especially is interesting because it often precedes some serious uptrends. Volume decline usually confirms these are legitimate reversals, not just noise.
The Cup and Handle is my personal favorite because it's technically a continuation pattern, but it sets up some clean long entries. You get that rounded cup formation, then a small pullback (the handle), and when it breaks above, that's your entry. Pro tip: the best entry is usually around 50-61.8% of the cup's depth.
Here's what separates winners from losers: don't just look at reversal patterns in isolation. Combine them with RSI, MACD, or Bollinger Bands. Pay attention to volume spikes—they tell you whether the pattern is real or just noise. And timeframe selection matters way more than people think; 4-hour and daily charts give you setups you can actually rely on.
Risk management is non-negotiable. Always place your stops near critical support or resistance levels. The whole point of mastering reversal patterns is to trade with an edge, not to gamble. Once you start seeing these patterns consistently and combining them with proper risk management, your trading results will shift dramatically.