Bearish Pennant Chart Pattern
In this lesson, we will discuss the following:
1.What is a pennant?
2.What is a bearish pennant?
3.When does this develop?
4.How do we identify it and techniques to make profit from the second big fall in price?
Pennant
A pennant is a small symmetrical triangle or flag shaped short term continuous patterns that expand wide and mingle like a cone as the pattern matures. It is formed when the stock movement is large.
Bearish pennant
This pattern is bearish in nature and indicates that the current downtrend in price may continue.
It is a continuous pattern where a pause is created in the price movement in the mid way through a heavy downtrend.
It creates an opportunity for short trading, looking to make profit from a second big fall in price.
When does a bearish pennant develop?
When there is acute drop in price and looks like a triangular flag as the price moves sideways, the bearish pennant develops.
This slowly makes lower highs and higher lows.
The downtrend continues with another identical-sized fall in price.
How to identify a bearish pennant?
The chart below is an illustration.
Number 1: Pole of the pattern
Pennant’s pole: There is an acute drop in price before the formation of flag-like pennants, known as pennant pole.
The pole indicates the start or the continuation of the downtrend .
The pole is necessary for the calculation part in placing the profit target for sell trade.
This pattern is hard to spot as the size of the triangular pennant is relatively small compared to the size of the entire downtrend .
We can learn to spot the pattern with practice.
Practice session
Identify the bearish pennants
Exercise 1: Identify the bearish pennant. Show exercise
Exercise 2: Identify the bearish pennant. Show exercise
Trading the bearish pennant
Technique 1
“Trade as soon as the price breaks out of the triangle pattern.”
Enter the trade when the candlestick has closed below the pennant’s lower trend line.
The chart below is an illustration.
Number 1: Pole of the pattern
Number 2: Area where price has broken the lower support of the pennant
1- Sell order (short entry)
2- Stop loss
Place your profit target
Before the consolidation of the market, measure the initial fall in price.
Place the profit target the same distance below the pennant’s breakout point.
Practice session
Exercise 1: Where would you place the entry, stop loss and take profit? Show exercise
Technique 2
“Wait till the price comes back to test the lower trend line as resistance ”
Enter your trade after the price falls below the pennants lower trend line.
Once support breaks, place a sell order after the price retests that trend line.
The broken support now becomes resistance.
The chart below is an illustration:
Number 1: Pole of the pattern
number 2: Area where price has found resistance at the previous support line.
Number 3: Distance between entry and take profit tp3 (the same height as pole number 1).
1 Sell order (short entry)
2 Stop loss
3 Take profit
Practice session
Exercise 1: where would you place the entry, stop loss and take profit? Show exercise
Nut Shell
An overview of the lesson discussed so far…
The Bearish pennant develops in a downtrend.
Selling opportunity: This pattern is bearish in nature and indicates that the current downtrend in price may continue. It indicates possible selling opportunities.
When there is acute drop in price and looks like a triangular flag as the price moves sideways, the bearish pennant develops.
Enter the trade after the support level has been broken, either on a breakout or on a retest of the pennants lower trend line.
Place your stop loss above the other side of the pennant.
The profit target is placed the same distance under the entry point as the height of the pole.