Bullish candlestick patterns could indicate that a market could be about to rally. This could happen at the end of a downtrend, signalling that a possible uptrend is on the horizon.
Let’s take a look at the six most common bullish candlestick patterns below.
Hammer
A hammer candlestick is characterised by a small body, a long lower wick, and little to no upper wick. It could be seen as a sign of exhaustion when the market is in a downtrend and signals a possible bullish reversal coming.
A hammer means sellers drove the price to new lows during the session but could not maintain it. Instead, buyers resisted, and the market closed around its opening price or higher. If a hammer is red or black (bear), the market closed somewhat lower than it opened.
However, if it closes above the opening price and the candle is green or white (bull), the signal is stronger.
When analysing the candlestick's body, the wick should be twice or three times the length of the body to be considered a hammer.
Inverse hammer
An inverse hammer is the same as a regular hammer but upside down. It still has a small body, but this time, it has a long upper wick and little to no lower wick.
With this candlestick pattern, bulls (buyers) grabbed control early in the day, driving the market higher following a downtrend.
However, the reversal failed to take hold, and the bears (sellers) came in and ensured its price remained approximately the same where it began. With that said, the bears (sellers) could not maintain the downturn, which could indicate a possible shift in momentum to the upside.
Bullish engulfing
A bullish, engulfing candlestick pattern is a combination of two different candles. The first candle is a red or black bear candle and appears as part of the downtrend.
The bear candle is immediately followed by a green or white bull candle that completely engulfs it. This indicates that buyers came in strong, starting at the previous candle's close, but eventually, the price rose and closed above the previous candle's high.
As the market concludes at or near the period’s top, barely declining, there should be minimal to no apparent upper or lower wick within the bull candle.
Piercing line
A piercing line is almost like a bullish engulfing candle pattern consisting of two candlesticks, which could indicate a potential market reversal. In this case, a red or black bear candle forms, immediately followed by a green or white bull candle.
In a piercing line pattern, the bear candlestick has a longer body and is not engulfed by the bull candle. Instead, the market often has a gap between the bear’s close and the bull's open but rises above the bear candle's midpoint.
We’re still seeing a market reversal, but the bears had complete control of the market until about halfway through the second session when the bulls came in and pushed the price higher.
Three white soldiers
After a solid downtrend, the three white soldiers come in and completely take over. This candlestick pattern consists of three consecutive green or white bull candles.
The first candle should close on the previous red or black bear candle range. The second bull candle should close above the bear candles open, and the third candle should close above the last bull candle close.
So, as the buying momentum grows, each one of the three candles should have a longer body than the previous. This is a strong indication that the downtrend will reverse into an uptrend.
Morning star
Many traders could see the morning star candle as a vital sign that a reversal from a downtrend is on the horizon. This candlestick pattern is made up of three different candles.
The first candle is a long red or black candle, followed by a doji or spinning top candle. It doesn’t matter if the doji or spinning top candle is bullish or bearish. What matters is the candle's size; it has to be small. The second candle also doesn’t overlap with the two candles next to it because the market will gap both on the open and the close.
The next immediate candle is then a long green or black bull candle.
This pattern indicates sellers came in but couldn’t continue with the downtrend. At this point, buyers started taking over, moving the market towards an uptrend.