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I just realized that many beginner traders still don't master one of the most useful patterns in technical analysis: the pin bar candle. It's interesting because once you understand it, you start seeing it everywhere and realize how many opportunities you've missed.
The pin bar candle basically shows a moment when the market tried to go in one direction but changed its mind. Someone (buyers or sellers) pushed strongly, but the price rebounded and ended up closing on the other side. It's like the market saying "no, not here" and that often precedes a trend reversal.
Visually, it's quite easy to recognize: you see a small body, a very long tail on one side, and almost nothing on the other. The close is near the end of that long tail. If the price first dropped but then reversed upward and closed higher, it's a bullish pin bar. If the opposite happened, it's bearish. Nothing complicated.
Now, here’s the important part that many ignore. Before entering on a pin bar candle, I always check if there was a large engulfing candle just before. If so, be careful: that big candle might have more strength than the reversal the pin bar seems to show. In those cases, the market often simply continues its previous move instead of reversing. This is what we call an engulfing pattern, and honestly, it’s one of those things that can save you many losses if you pay attention to it.
When I see a clean pin bar, I wait for it to close completely. Then, on the next candle, I don’t enter the market directly. I place a limit order exactly at the pin bar’s open price. For example, if the pin bar opened at 29,500 and closed at 30,000, I wait for it to return to 29,500 to enter. I set the stop-loss slightly below the tail, say at 28,950, and I calculate the take-profit as 2 to 3 times the risk I’m taking.
I also consider where the pin bar is relative to the 30-period moving average. If it’s above, I look for long entries. If below, short. But if the pin bar is exactly against the MA30, I only enter if there’s a very strong support or resistance level nearby.
In summary, the pin bar candle is a powerful reversal pattern when well-formed and free of distractions. What I like is that you don’t need complicated indicators to see it or to trade. It’s pure price action. Just don’t forget to check if there’s an engulfing candle before, because that completely changes the game. Once you get the rhythm, you start seeing opportunities you previously overlooked. If you want to dive deeper into more candlestick patterns, let me know.