I've noticed that many traders still don't know how to correctly recognize the hammer candlestick pattern when it appears in the market. Yet, it is one of the most reliable signals for identifying bullish reversals, especially if you know what to look for.



So, how is this pattern formed? Essentially, the price drops significantly during a session, but then buyers step in and push it back up almost to the opening level. What you see on the chart is a small body near the top of the candle with a very long lower wick. This long lower wick is the signature of the hammer candle: it shows that sellers tried to push the price down, but they failed.

From a psychological perspective, when you see a hammer candle after a prolonged downtrend, it means only one thing: sellers are losing strength. Buyers have regained control, and this change in momentum is exactly what you're looking for to enter a long position.

Now, the technical characteristics to keep in mind are three: the real body should be in the upper part of the candle, the lower wick should be at least twice the size of the body, and the upper shadow should be almost absent or very short. If you see a candle that doesn't meet these parameters, it's probably not a true hammer candle.

But here comes the important part: you can't rely on the pattern alone. I've seen too many traders blow their money following a hammer candle without confirmation. The next session must close strongly higher to confirm that the reversal is real. If the trading volume is high during that confirmation session, even better. And if the hammer forms right at a known support level? Then the signal becomes even more solid.

You also need to be careful not to confuse the hammer with the hanging man, which looks identical but forms in an uptrend and signals the opposite—that is, a possible bearish reversal. The context is everything.

One thing few people mention is that the hammer is not infallible. Sometimes it appears during a simple retracement within a larger downtrend and gives a false signal. For this reason, always, always use the hammer candle together with other indicators. Never base a trade solely on this pattern.

If you use it correctly, confirming with volume, support levels, and subsequent candles, the hammer candlestick becomes a truly powerful tool in your technical analysis toolkit. It's worth learning to recognize it well.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin