Introduction
Markets rarely turn on a dime; they often need to “test” a level twice before reversing. Tweezer Bottoms are the visual representation of this test.
This pattern is unique because it is defined by the lows of the candles, not necessarily their body color or shape.
How to Identify Tweezer Bottoms
- Candle 1: Typically a bearish candle that pushes price down to a new low.
- Candle 2: Can be bullish or bearish (though bullish is better).
- The Key: Both candles must have the exact same low (or within a few ticks).
- Visual: It looks like a pair of tweezers legs pointing down.
The Psychology
Think of this as a “Double Bottom” chart pattern but on a micro scale.
- On Day 1, sellers pushed the price to $100.
- On Day 2, they tried again to break $100 but failed exactly at that level.
- This repeated failure to break support tells traders that there is a massive limit buy order sitting at that price.
Trading Strategy
- Reliability: This pattern is stronger on higher timeframes (Daily or Weekly).
- Entry: Place a buy order slightly above the high of the second candle.
- Stop Loss: A tight stop just below the “tweezer” lows. This offers an excellent Risk-to-Reward ratio.