Welcome to our Technical Indicators Education Series. Today’s topic: K-Line (Candlesticks) Part 3 — Candlestick Cluster Patterns for Opportunity.
1. Triangle Patterns: New Direction After Volatility Contraction
Triangle patterns are defined by volatility contraction. Following a sharp move, the price swings become progressively tighter, coiling like a spring before releasing energy in a decisive new direction.
A. Ascending Triangle (Bullish Bias)
The Structure:
Top: A horizontal Resistance line (Sellers defend a fixed price).
Bottom: An upward sloping Support line (Buyers create Higher Lows).
Market Logic: Despite selling pressure at the top, strong market optimism drives aggressive dip-buying. Buyers are willing to pay higher prices on every pullback, refusing to let the price retest previous lows.
Resolution: Typically resolves with an Upside Breakout as sellers are finally absorbed. (Rarely, it can fail and act as a reversal).
B. Descending Triangle (Bearish Bias)
The Structure:
Bottom: A horizontal Support line (Buyers defend a fixed price).
Top: A downward sloping Resistance line (Sellers create Lower Highs).
Market Logic: Buyers try to hold the floor, but sellers become more aggressive with each rally, pushing the price down earlier each time. It forms a right-angled triangle pointing downward.
Resolution: This high-probability pattern usually culminates in a Downward Breakout as support collapses. It frequently appears during distribution phases.
2. Flag Patterns: The Struggle Between Opposing Forces
Flag patterns are reliable continuation formations that emerge when a strong trending move (the Flagpole) is followed by a brief consolidation phase (the Flag) as counter-trend forces temporarily challenge the prevailing momentum.
A. Bull Flag (Upside Continuation)
The Structure: Following a rapid, near-vertical price surge (the Flagpole), the price enters a tight consolidation channel with slightly downward-sloping boundaries.
Market Logic: Within this pattern, each successive wave registers lower highs as bears temporarily dominate. However, the selling volume usually decreases. Eventually, bulls regain control and propel prices upward to resume the advance.
B. Bear Flag (Downside Continuation)
The Structure: After a sharp, almost vertical decline (the Flagpole), the price forms a narrow, upward-tilting consolidation zone resembling a miniature rising channel.
Market Logic: Progressively higher lows reflect the bulls' fleeting dominance (a "dead cat bounce"). As buying dries up, bears reassert themselves with renewed selling pressure to continue the downtrend.
3. Rectangle: A Pause Within the Trend
Also known as a "Box" or "Trading Range." This represents a temporary equilibrium where Supply = Demand.
The Pattern: Price bounces between two parallel horizontal lines (Support and Resistance). It looks like a corridor.
Market Logic: Indecision. The Bulls defend the bottom, and the Bears defend the top.
Signal: Wait for the Breakout.
If it breaks the Top, the uptrend continues.
If it breaks the Bottom, the trend reverses or the downtrend continues.
4. Wedge Patterns: Minor Pullbacks After Momentum Surges
Wedges resemble triangles but with a distinct slant. They signal that the current directional movement is losing energy and a reversal is imminent.
A. Rising Wedge (Bearish Signal)
The Structure: Formed by connecting successive short-term highs and lows with two upward-sloping, converging trendlines.
Market Logic: This pattern is deceptive. Although prices are rising, the range is tightening, indicating that buying power is fading. It often appears during downtrends as a weak counter-rally, eventually breaking downward to resume the primary bear trend.
B. Falling Wedge (Bullish Signal)
The Structure: Formed when both minor highs and lows trace descending, converging trendlines.
Market Logic: Despite the downward slope, selling pressure is shrinking (drying up). It represents a healthy correction within a broader uptrend. It signals that the market has not exhausted its upward potential and is preparing for an upward breakout.
5. Applying the Pattern to NVDA’s K-Line
NVDA stopped trending vertically and began moving sideways.
But this is not random consolidation.
The highs are capped near a similar resistance zone
The lows are rising, forming a clear upward-sloping support line
Each pullback is shorter and shallower than the last
That combination is the textbook definition of volatility contraction with bullish pressure.
It’s very close to Ascending Triangle pattern. Do you agree?
Which pattern best fits $NVIDIA(NVDA)$’s current K-line?
Do you expect NVDA to break upward or roll over first?
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Comments
What stands out is the repeated failure to reclaim prior highs. Each bounce loses strength faster than the last, pointing to weakening demand. This rules out a rectangle due to the declining highs and differs from a falling wedge since support remains relatively flat. The structure looks more like distribution than accumulation.
Given this setup, I lean toward a downward break happening first. Descending triangles tend to resolve lower, especially after a strong run when momentum cools. Unless price can break above the descending resistance decisively, this consolidation feels more like a warning than a bullish pause.
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英伟达显示上升三角形的前半部分。
平顶:193美元附近有一条明显的顽固阻力线。每次NVDA反弹至190美元至193美元时,获利者都会介入并将其推低。
缺失的更高低点:对于真正的上升三角形,我们需要看到更高的低点(三角形的底线上升)。目前,Nvidia的低点有些持平或不稳定,上周在181美元至186美元之间波动。
结论:在我们看到一系列明显上升的低谷将价格挤压到193美元的阻力位之前,它仍然是一个矩形——横向盘整,而不是上升三角形。
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結構:在快速、近乎垂直的價格飆升(旗杆)之後,價格進入小幅盤整通道向下傾斜界限。
市場邏輯:在這種模式中,由於空頭暫時占主導地位,每個連續的波浪都會出現較低的高點。然而,銷量通常會減少。最終,多頭重新獲得控制權,推動價格上漲,恢復上漲。