Hammer Candlestick Pattern: How to Spot a Market Reversal

Introduction

If you only learn one candlestick pattern in your trading career, make it the Hammer. It is the classic signal that a downtrend is hitting a concrete floor and is about to bounce.

Appearing at the bottom of a downtrend, the Hammer signals that sellers have attempted to push the price lower but were violently rejected by buyers.Image of bullish hammer candlestick pattern chart

How to Identify a Hammer

Not every candle with a wick is a hammer. To trade this accurately, it must meet these three criteria:

  1. The Body: Small and located at the top of the range. The color (Green or Red) doesn’t matter much, though Green is slightly more bullish.
  2. The Lower Wick: This is the secret sauce. The lower tail (shadow) must be at least two times the length of the body.
  3. The Upper Wick: There should be very little to no upper wick.
  4. Trend Context: It must appear during a downtrend. A hammer in a sideways market is just noise.

The Psychology Behind the Pattern

Why does this pattern work? Let’s look at the story the candle tells:

  • The market opened, and sellers immediately took control, pushing prices down to new lows (creating the long lower wick).
  • However, at the low point, buyers stepped in with huge volume.
  • They pushed the price all the way back up, closing near the opening price.
  • The Result: The bears (sellers) are exhausted, and the bulls (buyers) have successfully defended a support level.

How to Trade the Hammer

Aggressive Entry: Buy immediately at the close of the Hammer candle. Conservative Entry: Wait for the next candle. If the next candle breaks the high of the Hammer, enter the trade.

  • Stop Loss: Place your stop loss 2-3 ticks below the lowest point of the Hammer’s wick.
  • Target: Aim for the next significant resistance level or the previous lower high.

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