The hikkake pattern refers to a price pattern used by technical analysts and traders to identify a short-term change in the Market's direction. The pattern has two separate configurations, one signalling a short-term downward price movement and the other implying a short-term upward price trend.
Hikkake is a Japanese term that means "to catch, deceive, or entrap." As a result, the hikkake pattern represents precisely a candle pattern that moves in one way but quickly reverses, trapping traders on the wrong side of the trade.
A bearish hikkake pattern and a bullish hikkake pattern are two variations of the hikkake pattern.
The following is an example of a bullish hikkake pattern:
A trader would set a buy stop order at the high of the second bar to profit (the bar is called the inside bar). A buy stop order refers to a purchase order for securities that will be executed after reaching a specific price.
It's worth noting that the open and close positions of the bars are ignored in a bullish hikkake pattern. In other words, the bar's colour does not matter whether it is red (open price is more significant than closing price) or green (open price is lower than Close Price).
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The following is an example of a bullish hikkake pattern:
A sell stop order would be placed at the low of the second bar to profit from this pattern. Like the bullish pattern, the bearish hikkake pattern ignores the open and close positions of the bars.
Both the bullish and bearish patterns depict a short-term drop in market Volatility followed by a breakout. The implied projection continues the trend once a hikkake pattern is developed, whether bullish or bearish. It does not guarantee that it will payout in the predicted direction.
Is there a hikkake pattern that can be identified? If so, did the hikkake pattern's implicit forecast come true?
Determine whether there is an inner bar pattern before looking for a probable hikkake pattern. For bars four and five, an inner bar pattern is identified. The following bar, the sixth bar, has a higher open and close than the fifth bar, indicating the possibility of a bearish pattern. The design is verified as the seventh bar drifts above the sixth bar, and the eighth bar's body closes below the fifth bar's low.