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Candlestick Chart

A candlestick chart is a type of price chart used in technical analysis that displays the open, high, low, and close (OHLC) for each time period as a visual “candle.” Each candle tells you who won the battle between buyers and sellers during that session.

How to Read a Candlestick

Every candlestick has two main components:

The body — the thick rectangle — shows the range between the open and close. A green (or white) body means the close was higher than the open: buyers won. A red (or black) body means the close was lower than the open: sellers won.

The wicks (shadows) — the thin lines above and below the body — show the high and low of the period. A long upper wick means sellers pushed the price back down from its high. A long lower wick means buyers stepped in and recovered from the low.

ElementWhat It Shows
Green / white bodyBullish candle — price closed above the open
Red / black bodyBearish candle — price closed below the open
Long bodyStrong conviction — buyers or sellers dominated the session
Short body (small range)Indecision — neither side took control
Long upper wickSellers rejected higher prices — bearish pressure at the top
Long lower wickBuyers absorbed selling and recovered — bullish pressure at the bottom
No wicks (marubozu)One side dominated from open to close with zero pushback

Why Candlestick Charts Are Popular

Candlestick charts pack far more information into a single glance than line charts or bar charts. A line chart shows only the closing price. A candlestick shows open, high, low, and close — plus the visual relationship between them. You can instantly see whether a session was dominated by buyers or sellers, how much volatility occurred, and where the key intraday battles played out.

Originating in 18th-century Japanese rice trading, candlestick charts became mainstream in Western markets in the 1990s. Today, they’re the default chart type on virtually every trading platform.

Key Candlestick Patterns

Single-Candle Patterns

PatternWhat It Looks LikeSignal
DojiTiny body with wicks on both sides — open and close nearly equalIndecision; potential reversal when it appears after a strong trend
HammerSmall body at top, long lower wick, little or no upper wickBullish reversal — sellers pushed price down but buyers recovered
Shooting starSmall body at bottom, long upper wick, little or no lower wickBearish reversal — buyers pushed price up but sellers rejected it
MarubozuFull body, no wicks at allExtreme conviction — one side controlled the entire session

Multi-Candle Patterns

PatternStructureSignal
Engulfing (bullish)A small red candle followed by a larger green candle that completely engulfs itBuyers overwhelmed sellers — bullish reversal
Engulfing (bearish)A small green candle followed by a larger red candle that engulfs itSellers overwhelmed buyers — bearish reversal
Morning starRed candle → small-body candle (gap down) → green candleThree-candle bullish reversal; strongest at support
Evening starGreen candle → small-body candle (gap up) → red candleThree-candle bearish reversal; strongest at resistance
Three white soldiersThree consecutive green candles with higher closesStrong bullish momentum — trend likely continuing
Three black crowsThree consecutive red candles with lower closesStrong bearish momentum — trend likely continuing

For a complete visual reference of all major patterns, see our Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet.

Using Candlesticks in Context

A hammer at random on a chart means little. A hammer at a well-established support level after an extended selloff, confirmed by rising volume and an oversold RSI — that’s a high-probability setup. Context is everything.

The best candlestick traders always ask three questions: Where is the pattern occurring (at support, resistance, or a moving average)? Is volume confirming the signal? Does a momentum indicator like the RSI or MACD agree?

Analyst’s Tip
On higher time frames, candlestick patterns carry more weight. A bullish engulfing on a weekly chart is far more significant than one on a 5-minute chart. When starting out, focus on daily charts — they offer the best balance of signal quality and frequency. For an in-depth guide, see Candlestick Patterns Guide.

Candlestick Charts vs. Other Chart Types

Chart TypeData ShownBest For
Line chartClosing price onlyQuick trend overview; clean long-term views
Bar chart (OHLC)Open, high, low, closeSame data as candlesticks but harder to read visually
Candlestick chartOpen, high, low, close with colored bodiesPattern recognition, intraday dynamics, reversal signals

Key Takeaways

  • Candlestick charts display open, high, low, and close — revealing the buyer/seller battle in each period.
  • The body shows the open-to-close range; the wicks show the full high-to-low range.
  • Key single-candle patterns include the doji, hammer, and shooting star.
  • Multi-candle patterns like engulfing, morning star, and evening star signal reversals.
  • Patterns are most reliable at key levels (support/resistance) and when confirmed by volume.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the difference between a candlestick chart and a bar chart?

Both show the same four data points — open, high, low, and close. The difference is visual. Candlesticks use filled and colored bodies that make it instantly clear whether the period was bullish or bearish. Bar charts use horizontal ticks on a vertical line, which conveys the same information but is harder to scan quickly.

Are candlestick patterns reliable?

Individual patterns are probabilistic, not certain. A single hammer or doji will fail plenty of times. Reliability increases dramatically when patterns appear at meaningful price levels — such as support or a moving average — and are confirmed by volume and momentum indicators.

What time frame should I use for candlestick analysis?

Daily charts are the most popular starting point — they offer enough data for patterns to be meaningful without the noise of intraday charts. Swing traders use daily and 4-hour charts. Day traders work on 5- to 15-minute charts. Long-term investors can spot major reversal patterns on weekly charts.