Chart Patterns
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The battle plan: reversals, continuation, stabilization
- 0:55 Reversal patterns: head and shoulders and saucers
- 1:53 The neckline break and volume confirmation trap
- 3:31 Continuation patterns: consolidation, flags, pennants
- 4:53 Stabilization: the syndicate manager's legal rescue
- 6:26 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why a head and shoulders pattern is NOT confirmed until price breaks the neckline with increased volume, and what the three peaks alone actually mean (nothing)
- The four reversal patterns and their directional bias: head and shoulders (bearish), inverted head and shoulders (bullish), saucer or rounding bottom (bullish), and inverted saucer or rounding top (bearish)
- How continuation patterns (consolidation, flags, pennants) signal the prior trend will resume, not reverse
- The distinction between a flag (small rectangle sloping against the trend) and a pennant (small symmetrical triangle after a sharp move)
- Why stabilization by the managing underwriter is a legal form of price manipulation explicitly permitted under Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules during the distribution period
- The hard rule that a stabilizing bid must be placed at or below the public offering price, never one cent above
- How to spot the classic exam trap that frames consolidation as a coming reversal, or stabilization as a violation
Read the full lesson, free
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