Just spotted a solid technical setup worth discussing - the shooting star candlestick pattern. If you've been trading trends, you've probably seen this one show up right when things look most bullish.



Here's what makes it interesting. A shooting star forms when you get a small body at the bottom with an extremely long upper wick - we're talking at least double the body size. That extended wick tells you something important: buyers pushed hard to drive prices higher, but then got absolutely rejected. The market basically said no and forced everything back down to where it started. That's the pattern in action.

The psychology is pretty straightforward. You've got aggressive buyers trying to establish new highs, momentum looks unstoppable, but then boom - serious selling pressure kicks in. Suddenly those buyers who thought they had control get pushed back to the opening zone. When you see this shooting star candlestick pattern near major resistance levels or along bearish trendlines, the reversal odds get really attractive. This is genuinely one of the more reliable setups for considering short entries.

But here's the crucial part - and this trips up a lot of traders. Don't jump in the second that shooting star candle closes. Wait. Let the next candle form and confirm the downward momentum is actually there. Otherwise you might catch a fake bull trap that'll liquidate your position before the real move happens.

I've had solid wins using this shooting star signal at key resistance zones. The pattern works because it's showing real market structure - buyers exhausted, sellers taking control. That's a genuine shift in momentum.

One last thing though - this is just technical analysis for educational purposes. Not investment advice. Always do your own research and risk management before any trade.
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