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Just been going through some classic chart patterns and realized the Adam and Eve pattern doesn't get enough attention from retail traders. It's actually pretty solid for catching reversals.
So here's the thing - this pattern shows up when you've got two peaks or two valleys that form specific shapes. The first peak (Adam) sits higher than the second one (Eve), or the first valley dips lower than the second. Thomas Bulkowski documented this back in his pattern encyclopedia and found it has legit success rates for predicting when trends actually flip.
What makes the Adam and Eve pattern work is the neckline - that's your confirmation line connecting the lowest points between the two formations. This is where it gets interesting. Once price breaks through that neckline, you've got your reversal signal. Break it upward? Downtrend's reversing to uptrend. Break it downward? The opposite happens.
I've noticed a lot of traders miss this one because they're too focused on head and shoulders or other mainstream patterns. But if you're patient and wait for that neckline break, the Adam and Eve pattern can give you some really clean entry points.
Obviously no pattern is bulletproof - there's always risk involved. That's why I never trade off one signal alone. I always cross-check with other technical tools, make sure the volume's backing it up, and I always set stop losses before entering. The Adam and Eve pattern works best when it's part of a larger strategy, not your only reason to trade.
If you're looking to improve your pattern recognition, definitely spend some time studying this one. Set up alerts on your charts, practice spotting it on historical data, and start paper trading it before risking real capital. Once you get comfortable identifying the Adam and Eve pattern in real time, it can become a reliable part of your technical analysis toolkit.