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Shooting Star

A shooting star is a bearish candlestick pattern that indicates a potential reversal of an uptrend. It consists of a small real body near the low of the day and a long upper shadow with little to no lower shadow, forming after a period of price advances. The shooting star shows buyers losing control by the close. Confirmation of the reversal is needed by the next candle declining below the shooting star. While a potential top, one candle alone may not be significant, so traders watch for confirmation of the downtrend to consider selling or shorting.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
258 views2 pages

Shooting Star

A shooting star is a bearish candlestick pattern that indicates a potential reversal of an uptrend. It consists of a small real body near the low of the day and a long upper shadow with little to no lower shadow, forming after a period of price advances. The shooting star shows buyers losing control by the close. Confirmation of the reversal is needed by the next candle declining below the shooting star. While a potential top, one candle alone may not be significant, so traders watch for confirmation of the downtrend to consider selling or shorting.

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laba prime
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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SHOOTING STAR: WHAT IT MEANS IN STOCK TRADING

By CORY MITCHELL
Updated April 06, 2022

Reviewed by CHARLES POTTERS


Fact checked by SUZANNE KVILHAUG

What Is a Shooting Star?


A shooting star is a bearish candlestick with a long upper shadow, little or no lower
shadow, and a small real body near the low of the day. It appears after an
uptrend.1 Said differently, a shooting star is a type of candlestick that forms when a
security opens, advances significantly, but then closes the day near the open again.

For a candlestick to be considered a shooting star, the formation must appear during
a price advance. Also, the distance between the highest price of the day and the opening
price must be more than twice as large as the shooting star's body. There should be
little to no shadow below the real body.

KEY TAKEAWAYS
• A shooting star occurs after an advance and indicates the price could start
falling.1
• The formation is bearish because the price tried to rise significantly during the
day, but then the sellers took over and pushed the price back down toward the
open.
• Traders typically wait to see what the next candle (period) does following a
shooting star. If the price declines during the next period they may sell or short.
• If the price rises after a shooting star, the formation may have been a false
signal or the candle is marking a potential resistance area around the price range
of the candle.

What Does the Shooting Star Tell You?


Shooting stars indicate a potential price top and reversal. The shooting star candle is
most effective when it forms after a series of three or more consecutive rising candles
with higher highs. It may also occur during a period of overall rising prices, even if a
few recent candles were bearish.

Following the advance, a shooting star opens and then rises strongly during the day.
This shows the same buying pressure seen over the last several periods. As the day
progresses, though, the sellers step in and push the price back down to near the open,
erasing the gains for the day. This shows that buyers lost control by the close of the
day, and the sellers may be taking over.

The long upper shadow represents the buyers who bought during the day but are now
in a losing position because the price dropped back to the open.

The candle that forms after the shooting star is what confirms the shooting star candle.
The next candle's high must stay below the high of the shooting star and then proceed
to close below the close of the shooting star. Ideally, the candle after the shooting
star gaps lower or opens near the prior close and then moves lower on heavy volume.
Page 1 of 2
SHOOTING STAR: WHAT IT MEANS IN STOCK TRADING
By CORY MITCHELL
Updated April 06, 2022

Reviewed by CHARLES POTTERS


Fact checked by SUZANNE KVILHAUG
A down day after a shooting star helps confirm the price reversal and indicates the
price could continue to fall. Traders may look to sell or short sell.

If the price rises after a shooting star, the price range of the shooting star may still act
as resistance. For example, the price may consolidate in the area of the shooting star.
If the price ultimately continues to rise, the uptrend is still intact and traders should
favor long positions over selling or shorting.

The Difference Between the Shooting Star and the Inverted


Hammer
The inverted hammer and the shooting star look exactly the same. They both have
long upper shadows and small real bodies near the low of the candle, with little or no
lower shadow. The difference is context. A shooting star occurs after a price advance
and marks a potential turning point lower. An inverted hammer occurs after a price
decline and marks a potential turning point higher.

Limitations of the Shooting Star


One candle isn't all that significant in a major uptrend. Prices are always gyrating, so
the sellers taking control for part of one period—like in a shooting star—may not end
up being significant at all.

This is why confirmation is required. Selling must occur after the shooting star,
although even with confirmation there is no guarantee the price will continue to fall,
or how far. After a brief decline, the price could keep advancing in alignment with the
longer-term uptrend.

Utilize stop losses when using candlesticks, so when they don't work out your risk is
controlled. Also, consider using candlesticks in conjunction with other forms of
analysis. A candlestick pattern may take on more significance if it occurs near a level
that has been deemed important by other forms of technical analysis.

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