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Been studying reversal patterns for a while now, and honestly the difference between catching a flip early vs missing it entirely comes down to knowing what to look for. Let me share what I've learned about the key setups that actually work.
On the bearish side, you've got some heavy hitters. Double Tops are obvious—when price bounces off the same resistance twice and can't push through, that's usually when sellers take over. Head & Shoulders is the classic one everyone talks about; the neckline break is your confirmation. Rising Wedges always get me because the pattern looks bullish at first, but the tightening action into an uptrend typically ends in a sharp drop. Then there's the Expanding Triangle where volatility swings get wider before the bottom falls out. And if you see a Triple Top, that's three consecutive rejections at the same level—pretty hard to ignore as a sell signal.
The bullish reversal patterns cheat sheet is basically the mirror image. Double Bottoms create support zones that can launch strong rallies. Inverted Head & Shoulders is just the bearish version flipped upside down, but it works just as well. Falling Wedges are interesting because price contracts into a downtrend, then suddenly breaks upward with conviction. Expanding Triangles on the upside show increasing volatility before the breakout happens. And Triple Bottoms? Three bounces from the same support level usually means buyers are serious.
Here's what I always tell people though—never just trade the pattern in isolation. I always check volume confirmation and wait for a candle to actually close beyond the pattern boundary. The reversal patterns that work best are the ones you combine with proper risk management and multiple timeframe analysis. Don't get caught up in the pattern alone; make sure it fits into your bigger strategy. Keep your stops tight, manage your positions, and remember that even the cleanest pattern can fail if you're not reading the overall market context correctly.