Friday, July 12, 2013

Bear Pennant

By Tothetick Education

The Bear Pennant as a price action pattern typically presents immediately following an impulsive move in the market & represents a short consolidation before the continuation of the bearish trend. In general Pennants are found frequently in all markets, time frames, & price ranges. A fairly common price pattern that tends to provide a great reward-to-risk ratio when traded with a clear trend bias. They also tend to be easy to identify, very reliable & therefore, a trader favorite.

Visually Bear Pennants are a 2 part structure: a Pole with a base & a tip & then a pennant which looks very much like a small ‘stubby’ symmetrical triangle attached to the Pole facing right. In the case of a Bear Pennant the Pole looks like it is up-side-down with the tip at the bottom.

Bear Pennants are characterized with a series of higher lows & lower highs with trend lines drawn to represent the immediate support & resistance. The shape is altered by the slope of the descending resistance line & the slope of the ascending support line which is ‘converging’ or; inclining toward each other. The range-bound price action is balanced between buyers & sellers exhibiting similar strength/weakness & the pattern highlights this ‘mid-line’ price while squeezing to form an Apex.

The bearish continuation pattern has 3 phases:

1) Background: A Strong impulsive, thrusting action with a surge in volume & price establishes a clear picture of the controlling bearish trend direction. This action is represented visually by a Pole with tip pointing down. Deeper & more drama the better as the Pole is the Key to recognizing the potential for the continuation of the pattern. The Pole represents trend direction as well as its strength & often this pattern is initiated as a new breakdown in price from an established area & sellers are in control. This pattern has ‘1 rule: all Pennants must have a pole.’

2) The second phase is a pause for consolidation of the action both in volume & price and is represented by the Pennant. As traders we like to see this phase very short in duration with only 2 or 3 swings while our price action is range bound maintaining the higher lows & lower highs shape & the volume is ‘resting’.

3) The pattern confirms as a bearish continuation pattern if the action creates a new bearish breakdown with a surge again from the bears in both volume & price. The immediate lower support outlined by the Pennant is the area traders look to see confirm the breakdown. Typically the action will mimic the volatility & energy experienced with the Pole creation.

Aggressive traders may trade short:

  • failed swing high efforts on resistance once confirmed
  • once the ‘mid-line’ price or Apex has broken down
  • Traders can gauge success of the immediate swing based on this incremental value & when price approaches the lower support line should gauge the momentum.
  • Stop placement can be fairly tight right above resistance & can be adjusted downward accordingly.

Conservative traders will enter a trade short:

  • once the lower support line has been broken
  • once the new breakdown has confirmed

False breakouts do happen & confirmation needed is always a traders’ choice. Several methods that apply here for either intrabar &/or close bar options offered in sequence: breakdown below support price, line holds retrace as new resistance, price clears breakdown swing low price, price clears swing low of pennant/ Pole tip, or larger chart combination.

Stop placement considerations can be aggressively tightened after the breakdown.

Measured Move Targets based on structure of Pole & the Bear Pennant

Aggressive with Momentum & Volume: duplication of the original move or trader choice measurement of the Pole:

  • Apex or BreakDown price (minus)  Pole measure = target
  • Pole measure = ((Pole Base price (minus) Pole Tip price))

Conservative:

  • Apex or BreakDown price (minus)  Pennant measure = target
  • Pennant measure = (swing high price of pennant (minus) swing low price of pennant)

Example Bear Pennant as a bearish continuation pattern:

Bear Pennant

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