Japanese Candlestick Patterns-Morning Star(Figure 22)
Figure 22 illustrates a Morning Star formation. A Morning Star is a three day reversal pattern that starts off with a dark candle on the first day, followed by a black or white candle that gaps down in price but trades into the range of the first day’s candle (wick). The final day of the formation reveals a white candle gapping up in price and closed well into the range of the candle of the first day. After a substantial downtrend, the first days candle reveals strong selling. On the second day sellers open the day lower but are losing steam as buyers step in and absorb the supply of stock causing a small trading range for the day. The third day reveals buyers taking control as demand for the stock increases dramatically, causing the last candle to trade well into the body of the first day’s candle and wiping out losses for the period. A few things we can look for to help strengthen the signal:
•The length of the downtrend preceding the formation.
•High volume on all three trading days of the formation.
•The length of the first and last candle. The longer the better.
•The distance the third candle trades into or above the candle of the first day.
•The pattern form at a point of technical support such as a major moving average, trend line, or horizontal support.
Japanese Candlestick Patterns-Morning Star