1. Understanding the Harami Cross candle:

what are you looking for

A large candle (either green bullish or red bearish), followed by a very small candle in the shape of a "cross" (called a Doji).

Interpretation:

If this candle appears after a strong uptrend:

This means that the upward momentum is starting to weaken, and there is a strong possibility that the market will start to decline.

If it appears after a strong downtrend:

The downward momentum is slowing down, and there is a possibility that the market may start to rise.

Practical example:

If you are trading in the currency market (such as the EUR/USD pair) and this pattern appears after a strong upward movement, wait for confirmation of the decline through additional signals, such as a break of a support level or an increase in trading volume on the decline.

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2. Understanding Bullish & Bearish Harami Candles:

Bullish Harami (Positive):

It usually appears after a downtrend.

Practical example:

You have a chart of a currency pair or stock, and the trend is down. Suddenly a big red (bearish) candle appears followed by a small green candle inside the body of the first candle.

Expectation: The probability of the price rising after the pattern.

Bearish Harami (Negative):

Appears after an uptrend.

Practical example:

In a stock or currency chart, the trend is up. A large green candle appears followed by a small red candle inside the body of the first candle.

Expectation: The price will likely fall after the pattern.

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How do you use these patterns?

1. Wait for confirmation:

Don't rely on the pattern alone! After the candles appear, watch for other signals such as:

Breaking a support or resistance level.

Technical indicators (RSI or MACD) to see if the trend supports the pattern.

Volume: Confirmation of the strength of the reversal.

2. Determine the entry point:

Entry is after confirmation of the reversal.

Example: If a Bearish Harami appears, wait for the price to close below the low of the second candle to enter a sell trade.

3. Set Stop Loss:

Place your stop loss above the high of the large candle (for a bearish pattern) or below the low of the large candle (for a bullish pattern).

4. Set goals:

Use support and resistance levels to set your targets.

Example: If you enter a sell trade after a Bearish Harami, set your target at the next support level.

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Do you have an example of a particular chart you want to analyze? Or need help applying this to a trading instrument?