Sunday 18 October 2015

> HAMMER AND HANGING-MAN LINES



In Exhibit 4.14 we see that the rally, which began in early February, terminated with the arrival of two consecutive hanging-man lines. The importance of bearish confirmation after the hanging-man line is reflected in this chart. One method of bearish confirmation would be for the next day's open to be under the hanging man's real body. Note that after the appearance of the first hanging man, the market opened higher. However, after the second hanging man, when the market opened under the hanging man's real body, the market backed off.



Exhibit 4.15 illustrates that a black real body day, with a lower close after a hanging-man day, can be another method of bearish confirmation. Lines 1, 2, and 3 were a series of hanging-man lines. Lack of bearish confirmation after lines 1 and 2 meant the uptrend was still in force.



Observe hanging man 3. The black candlestick which followed provided the bearish confirmation of this hanging man line. Although the market opened about unchanged after hanging man 3, by the time of its close, just about anyone who bought on the opening or closing of hanging man 3 was "hanging" in a losing trade. (In this case, the selloff on the long black candlestick session was so severe that anyone who bought on the hanging-man day—not just those who bought on the open and close—were left stranded in a losing position.)
Exhibit 4.16 shows an extraordinary advance in the orange juice market from late 1989 into early 1990. Observe where this rally stopped. It stopped at the hanging man made in the third week of 1990. This chart illustrates the point that a reversal pattern does not mean that prices will reverse, as we discussed in Chapter 3. A reversal indicator implies that the prior trend should end. That is exactly what happened here. After the appearance of the hanging-man reversal pattern, the prior uptrend ended with the new trend moving sideways.



Another hanging man appeared in July. This time prices quickly reversed from up to down. But, as we have discussed previously, this cenario should not always be expected with a top trend reversal.
Exhibit 4.17 illustrates a classic hanging-man pattern in May. It shows a very small real body, no upper shadow, and a long lower shadow. The next day's black real body confirmed this hanging man and indicated a time to vacate longs. (Note the bullish hammer in early April.)

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