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A Beginner’s Guide to Candlestick PatternsThere are two basic forms of information that traders rely on: fundamental analysis (FA), the study of a company’s financial books and ratios, and technical analysis (TA), the study of a stock’s price behavior. With FA, the aim is to identify undervalued companies that should grow in the future, while TA aims to predict future price action based on past behavior. To do this, traders track candlestick patterns. In this article, we’ll explain how to read candles and cover the 37 most essential patterns that every active trader and chartist needs to know. Common Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet What is a candlestick pattern? To understand candle patterns, you must know how to read a candle.Candlesticks themselves contain a wealth of information. Ever since they were invented in the 1700s by Japanese rice traders, they’ve helped investors and traders everywhere visualize price action. Here are the components of a candle:[1]Duration. This one isn’t actually on the candle, but the duration of your chart determines the duration of the candle, so it’s important to keep in mind. For example, on a weekly chart, a single candle represents one week. On a daily chart, a candle represents one day, etc.Body. The body of the candle refers to the filled-in blocky part that makes up most of the candle itself.The top and bottom of a candle represent where the price started and closed.Color. The color of the candle determines whether the price went up or down.A red candle started the trading period at the top of the candle and closed the trading period at the bottom.A green candle is the opposite. The bottom of the candle is where trading started and the trading period closed at the top of the body.Size. The size tells you how far the price moved from open to close.A small candle represents relatively little price movement.A large candle represents a lot of price movement.Wick. The wick is the little line that pops out of the top and bottom of the candle’s body. Wicks represent the peaks of that trading period’s price level.A short wick means the price didn’t move very far away from the opening or closing price (depending on the color).A long wick means the price moved well outside of the range of the open or close (depending on the color). Single Candlestick Patterns DojiA doji has basically no body, indicating the open and close price were basically identical. The size of the wick may indicate how much volatility occurred over the session, but this neutral candle often indicates uncertainty (or lack of trading interest).[2]Bullish or bearish? Neutral.Dragonfly dojiA dragonfly doji refers to a doji with an extremely long bottom-side wick, indicating there was a of intrasession price action below the open and close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Gravestone dojiAlso known as the inverted dragonfly, this doji has a long wick above the body. This is universally noted as bearish, since it means there was a larger attempt for the price to move higher that ultimately failed.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.HammerA hammer is always green. It has a small body with a wick sticking out through the bottom of the candle. That wick may be relatively short or kind of on the longer side.[3]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Inverted hammerPeople assume the inverted hammer is bearish since it’s the “opposite” of a hammer, but it’s not. The green body with the wick on top indicates the market is trying to push the price higher, even if there might have been a return to lower levels heading into close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Hanging manThe hanging man looks identical to the hammer except it can be red or green. The key with the hanging man is when it appears. It only counts as a hanging man candle if it appears after a dedicated uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.The hanging man is often considered a potential reversal indicator, meaning that it’s possible the uptrend will become a downtrend.Bullish spinning topNicknamed the spinning top after its shape (it looks kind of like a children’s top), the bullish spinning top has a small, green body and a wick sticking out of both ends. It can only appear after a prolonged downtrend.Bullish or bearish? Bullish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bearish spinning topThe bearish spinning top is the inverse of a bullish spinning top—it’s just a red body and it appears after a prolonged uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bullish MarubozuThe bullish Marubozu stands out prominently on charts. It's got a very large body and no wick on either side (or an extremely tiny wick). The bullish Marubozu is a huge sign that the market is moving with conviction in one direction.[4]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish MarubozuThe only difference between the bullish and the bearish Marubozu is the color of the body. The bullish version is green; the bearish version is red.[5]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. Double Candlestick Patterns Bullish kickerThe bullish kicker occurs when a red candle is followed immediately by a green candle with a gap between the two.[6]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a gap? A gap refers to a specific phenomenon that occurs between candlesticks. Normally, one candle overlaps with the next one, indicating that the price is moving in increments. A gap occurs when there’s open space separating one candle and another. This occurs when the price jumps way up (or way down) between sessions.Bearish kickerA bearish kicker is the opposite of a bullish kicker—a green candle is followed by a red candle that gaps down.[7]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Bullish engulfingA bullish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle follows a red candle. The “engulfing” part is where the green candle is bigger than the red candle in terms of the body. The green candle has a lower low and a higher high.[8]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Bearish engulfingThe bearish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle is completely engulfed by a larger red candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is widely accepted as a reversal pattern.Piercing lineThe piercing line is one of the more difficult patterns to spot just because it seems kind of innocuous at first. It requires a long red candle with short wicks, followed by a smaller green candle that punctures the base of the previous candle’s bottom.[9]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Dark cloud coverDark cloud cover is the opposite of a piercing line—a green candle with a large body is followed by a red candle with a smaller body. The top of the red candle must be higher than the top of the green candle, and the bottom of the red candle must hit roughly around the midpoint of the green candle.[10]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is also a reversal pattern.Tweezer bottomThe tweezer bottom is easy to spot by the two long wicks that stop at the same price level. This pattern also must occur at the bottom of a downtrend, and the two candles must have relatively similar tops. The first candle must be red and the second candle must be green.[11]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered to be a reversal pattern.Tweezer topThe tweezer top is the inverse of the tweezer bottom. Two long wicks must sit at the same price level, the first candle must be green, and the second candle must be red. Also, this pattern only counts if it appears at the top of an uptrend.[12]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is a reversal pattern.Bullish HaramiThe bullish Harami is noted by its large red candle, followed by an engulfed green candle. The green candle must be small, and there must be a wick hanging from the bottom of the candle.[13]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish HaramiThe bearish Harami requires a large green candle followed by an engulfed red candle with a tiny wick on top.[14]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. Triple Candlestick Patterns Morning starThe morning star pattern is considered a classic reversal pattern. It is noted by a substantial red candle, a smaller green candle that gaps down, and a larger green candle that gaps up. The last candle must close higher than the midpoint of the first candle.[15]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bullish abandoned babyIf you see a substantial red candle and a gap down to a green doji followed by a gap up and a huge green candle, you’re looking at a bullish abandoned baby. You can remember this pattern by noting that the tiny doji looks like it has been “abandoned” by the red and green “parents” above it.[16]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish abandoned babyThe bearish abandoned baby is the reverse of the bullish abandoned baby. The first candle is green, the “baby” will be a doji floating above, and the last candle below will be red.[17]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three white soldiersThree white soldiers is pretty easy to remember because it's just three green candles. The candles must all be green and either matching or drifting upwards.[18]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is considered one of the more consistent patterns in TA.Three black crowsThree black crows is the opposite of three white soldiers. You’ve got three red candles with large bodies all matching levels or slowly drifting downward.[19]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three line strikeThree line strike is actually a four-candle pattern. It is sort of an extension of the three black crows or three white soldiers and is considered a reversal pattern. It occurs when a large engulfing candle overtakes the three previous candles of a different color. So, with three white soldiers, you’d need a large red candle to overtake the previous three. With three black crows, you’d need a giant green candle to overtake the previous three.[20]Bullish or bearish? Depends on the trend. Larger Patterns Cup and handleThe cup and handle is a larger pattern consisting usually of 20+ candles. It appears kind of like an old school coffee cup: there’s a large downtrend that smooths out at the bottom of the “cup.” Then, there’s an uptrend that matches the downtrend symmetrically. At the end of the “cup,” a sharp downturn marks the “handle,” which is often followed by a new bullish trend.[21]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Double topA double top simply refers to any extended series of candles where the peak of the uptrend stops at a specific price level twice. These are typically easy to spot because the wicks will poke out from the chart and touch the same price level twice.[22]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Double bottomThe inverse of the double top is the double bottom. It’s any pattern where two wicks in a channel touch down at the same price level.[23]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.WedgeWedges are a type of channel. They are noted by an upward or downward trend where the channel slowly feeds down into a narrower point. As the wedge tightens, it gets closer to a decision area where the trend can break up or down.[24]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. The shape of the wedge can help you identify confirmations and reversals, but the wedges themselves aren’t bearish or bullish.What is a channel? A channel is sort of like a lane on a road. It refers to two lines that contain all of the price action in an area. The edges of a channel are often the source of resistance or support points.FlagFlags, also known as pennants, are a kind of extremely tight wedge that often appears after large moves up or down. The shape of the flag is more of a triangular boat flag as opposed to a standard national flag.[25]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. Flags don’t signal anything other than decision points where investors and traders are unsure of what to do. Confirmation Patterns Rising windowThe rising window is a two-candle confirmation signal that occurs when a candle gaps up past a support or resistance line following an uptrend.[26]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a confirmation? In technical analysis, a confirmation refers to any event which affirms the previous signal. So, take three white soldiers—a classic bullish signal. If the three white soldiers sit on a resistance line and then a rising window breaks that line, it is considered a confirmation—the bullish trend is set to continue.Falling windowThe falling window (sometimes casually and incorrectly called a falling dagger) is the reverse of a rising window. It’s a two-candle confirmation that breaks a trend or support/resistance line by gapping down past it.[27]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three inside upFollowing a period of consolidation or a downward trend, you can spot a reversal confirmation with the three inside up pattern. This is a large red candle, a smaller green candle that sits around the base of the first candle, and then a green candle rising above the first candle's high.[28]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three inside downThree inside down is the bearish version of the three inside up. A large green candle is followed by a rising red candle, then a red candle that breaks the previous low of the initial green candle.[29]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three outside upThree outside up is a bullish confirmation signal that requires a red candle, an engulfing green candle, and a third green candle with a midpoint higher than the top of the previous candle.[30]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three outside downThree outside down is the reverse of the three outside up. A green candle is engulfed by a large red candle, then there’s a third red candle trending down and passing the base of the engulfing candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. $ETH {spot}(ETHUSDT) $BTC {spot}(BTCUSDT)

A Beginner’s Guide to Candlestick Patterns

There are two basic forms of information that traders rely on: fundamental analysis (FA), the study of a company’s financial books and ratios, and technical analysis (TA), the study of a stock’s price behavior. With FA, the aim is to identify undervalued companies that should grow in the future, while TA aims to predict future price action based on past behavior. To do this, traders track candlestick patterns. In this article, we’ll explain how to read candles and cover the 37 most essential patterns that every active trader and chartist needs to know.
Common Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet

What is a candlestick pattern?

To understand candle patterns, you must know how to read a candle.Candlesticks themselves contain a wealth of information. Ever since they were invented in the 1700s by Japanese rice traders, they’ve helped investors and traders everywhere visualize price action. Here are the components of a candle:[1]Duration. This one isn’t actually on the candle, but the duration of your chart determines the duration of the candle, so it’s important to keep in mind. For example, on a weekly chart, a single candle represents one week. On a daily chart, a candle represents one day, etc.Body. The body of the candle refers to the filled-in blocky part that makes up most of the candle itself.The top and bottom of a candle represent where the price started and closed.Color. The color of the candle determines whether the price went up or down.A red candle started the trading period at the top of the candle and closed the trading period at the bottom.A green candle is the opposite. The bottom of the candle is where trading started and the trading period closed at the top of the body.Size. The size tells you how far the price moved from open to close.A small candle represents relatively little price movement.A large candle represents a lot of price movement.Wick. The wick is the little line that pops out of the top and bottom of the candle’s body. Wicks represent the peaks of that trading period’s price level.A short wick means the price didn’t move very far away from the opening or closing price (depending on the color).A long wick means the price moved well outside of the range of the open or close (depending on the color).
Single Candlestick Patterns
DojiA doji has basically no body, indicating the open and close price were basically identical. The size of the wick may indicate how much volatility occurred over the session, but this neutral candle often indicates uncertainty (or lack of trading interest).[2]Bullish or bearish? Neutral.Dragonfly dojiA dragonfly doji refers to a doji with an extremely long bottom-side wick, indicating there was a of intrasession price action below the open and close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Gravestone dojiAlso known as the inverted dragonfly, this doji has a long wick above the body. This is universally noted as bearish, since it means there was a larger attempt for the price to move higher that ultimately failed.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.HammerA hammer is always green. It has a small body with a wick sticking out through the bottom of the candle. That wick may be relatively short or kind of on the longer side.[3]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Inverted hammerPeople assume the inverted hammer is bearish since it’s the “opposite” of a hammer, but it’s not. The green body with the wick on top indicates the market is trying to push the price higher, even if there might have been a return to lower levels heading into close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Hanging manThe hanging man looks identical to the hammer except it can be red or green. The key with the hanging man is when it appears. It only counts as a hanging man candle if it appears after a dedicated uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.The hanging man is often considered a potential reversal indicator, meaning that it’s possible the uptrend will become a downtrend.Bullish spinning topNicknamed the spinning top after its shape (it looks kind of like a children’s top), the bullish spinning top has a small, green body and a wick sticking out of both ends. It can only appear after a prolonged downtrend.Bullish or bearish? Bullish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bearish spinning topThe bearish spinning top is the inverse of a bullish spinning top—it’s just a red body and it appears after a prolonged uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bullish MarubozuThe bullish Marubozu stands out prominently on charts. It's got a very large body and no wick on either side (or an extremely tiny wick). The bullish Marubozu is a huge sign that the market is moving with conviction in one direction.[4]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish MarubozuThe only difference between the bullish and the bearish Marubozu is the color of the body. The bullish version is green; the bearish version is red.[5]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
Double Candlestick Patterns
Bullish kickerThe bullish kicker occurs when a red candle is followed immediately by a green candle with a gap between the two.[6]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a gap? A gap refers to a specific phenomenon that occurs between candlesticks. Normally, one candle overlaps with the next one, indicating that the price is moving in increments. A gap occurs when there’s open space separating one candle and another. This occurs when the price jumps way up (or way down) between sessions.Bearish kickerA bearish kicker is the opposite of a bullish kicker—a green candle is followed by a red candle that gaps down.[7]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Bullish engulfingA bullish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle follows a red candle. The “engulfing” part is where the green candle is bigger than the red candle in terms of the body. The green candle has a lower low and a higher high.[8]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Bearish engulfingThe bearish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle is completely engulfed by a larger red candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is widely accepted as a reversal pattern.Piercing lineThe piercing line is one of the more difficult patterns to spot just because it seems kind of innocuous at first. It requires a long red candle with short wicks, followed by a smaller green candle that punctures the base of the previous candle’s bottom.[9]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Dark cloud coverDark cloud cover is the opposite of a piercing line—a green candle with a large body is followed by a red candle with a smaller body. The top of the red candle must be higher than the top of the green candle, and the bottom of the red candle must hit roughly around the midpoint of the green candle.[10]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is also a reversal pattern.Tweezer bottomThe tweezer bottom is easy to spot by the two long wicks that stop at the same price level. This pattern also must occur at the bottom of a downtrend, and the two candles must have relatively similar tops. The first candle must be red and the second candle must be green.[11]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered to be a reversal pattern.Tweezer topThe tweezer top is the inverse of the tweezer bottom. Two long wicks must sit at the same price level, the first candle must be green, and the second candle must be red. Also, this pattern only counts if it appears at the top of an uptrend.[12]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is a reversal pattern.Bullish HaramiThe bullish Harami is noted by its large red candle, followed by an engulfed green candle. The green candle must be small, and there must be a wick hanging from the bottom of the candle.[13]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish HaramiThe bearish Harami requires a large green candle followed by an engulfed red candle with a tiny wick on top.[14]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
Triple Candlestick Patterns
Morning starThe morning star pattern is considered a classic reversal pattern. It is noted by a substantial red candle, a smaller green candle that gaps down, and a larger green candle that gaps up. The last candle must close higher than the midpoint of the first candle.[15]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bullish abandoned babyIf you see a substantial red candle and a gap down to a green doji followed by a gap up and a huge green candle, you’re looking at a bullish abandoned baby. You can remember this pattern by noting that the tiny doji looks like it has been “abandoned” by the red and green “parents” above it.[16]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish abandoned babyThe bearish abandoned baby is the reverse of the bullish abandoned baby. The first candle is green, the “baby” will be a doji floating above, and the last candle below will be red.[17]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three white soldiersThree white soldiers is pretty easy to remember because it's just three green candles. The candles must all be green and either matching or drifting upwards.[18]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is considered one of the more consistent patterns in TA.Three black crowsThree black crows is the opposite of three white soldiers. You’ve got three red candles with large bodies all matching levels or slowly drifting downward.[19]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three line strikeThree line strike is actually a four-candle pattern. It is sort of an extension of the three black crows or three white soldiers and is considered a reversal pattern. It occurs when a large engulfing candle overtakes the three previous candles of a different color. So, with three white soldiers, you’d need a large red candle to overtake the previous three. With three black crows, you’d need a giant green candle to overtake the previous three.[20]Bullish or bearish? Depends on the trend.
Larger Patterns

Cup and handleThe cup and handle is a larger pattern consisting usually of 20+ candles. It appears kind of like an old school coffee cup: there’s a large downtrend that smooths out at the bottom of the “cup.” Then, there’s an uptrend that matches the downtrend symmetrically. At the end of the “cup,” a sharp downturn marks the “handle,” which is often followed by a new bullish trend.[21]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Double topA double top simply refers to any extended series of candles where the peak of the uptrend stops at a specific price level twice. These are typically easy to spot because the wicks will poke out from the chart and touch the same price level twice.[22]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Double bottomThe inverse of the double top is the double bottom. It’s any pattern where two wicks in a channel touch down at the same price level.[23]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.WedgeWedges are a type of channel. They are noted by an upward or downward trend where the channel slowly feeds down into a narrower point. As the wedge tightens, it gets closer to a decision area where the trend can break up or down.[24]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. The shape of the wedge can help you identify confirmations and reversals, but the wedges themselves aren’t bearish or bullish.What is a channel? A channel is sort of like a lane on a road. It refers to two lines that contain all of the price action in an area. The edges of a channel are often the source of resistance or support points.FlagFlags, also known as pennants, are a kind of extremely tight wedge that often appears after large moves up or down. The shape of the flag is more of a triangular boat flag as opposed to a standard national flag.[25]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. Flags don’t signal anything other than decision points where investors and traders are unsure of what to do.
Confirmation Patterns

Rising windowThe rising window is a two-candle confirmation signal that occurs when a candle gaps up past a support or resistance line following an uptrend.[26]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a confirmation? In technical analysis, a confirmation refers to any event which affirms the previous signal. So, take three white soldiers—a classic bullish signal. If the three white soldiers sit on a resistance line and then a rising window breaks that line, it is considered a confirmation—the bullish trend is set to continue.Falling windowThe falling window (sometimes casually and incorrectly called a falling dagger) is the reverse of a rising window. It’s a two-candle confirmation that breaks a trend or support/resistance line by gapping down past it.[27]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three inside upFollowing a period of consolidation or a downward trend, you can spot a reversal confirmation with the three inside up pattern. This is a large red candle, a smaller green candle that sits around the base of the first candle, and then a green candle rising above the first candle's high.[28]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three inside downThree inside down is the bearish version of the three inside up. A large green candle is followed by a rising red candle, then a red candle that breaks the previous low of the initial green candle.[29]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three outside upThree outside up is a bullish confirmation signal that requires a red candle, an engulfing green candle, and a third green candle with a midpoint higher than the top of the previous candle.[30]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three outside downThree outside down is the reverse of the three outside up. A green candle is engulfed by a large red candle, then there’s a third red candle trending down and passing the base of the engulfing candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
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Ethereum sees 25% validation drop post-Fusaka as Prysm bug nears finality lossShortly after the Fusaka network upgrade, the Ethereum network saw a sharp drop in validator participation after a bug in the Prysm consensus client knocked a chunk of votes offline. According to a Thursday Prysm announcement, version v7.0.0 of the client unnecessarily generated old states while processing outdated attestations, a flaw that Prysm core developer Terence Tsao said prevented the nodes from functioning correctly. Developers recommended that users launch the client with the “--disable-last-epoch-targets” flag as a temporary workaround. Beaconcha.in network data shows that at epoch 411,448, the network achieved only 75% sync participation (the percentage of 512 randomly selected nodes signing chain heads) and 74.7% voting participation. Voting participation being down 25% is under 9% shy of the network losing the two-thirds supermajority needed to maintain finality and regular operation. At the time of writing, the current Ethereum network epoch (411,712) is experiencing nearly 99% voting participation and has reached 97% sync participation, indicating that the network has recovered. Prior to the issue, epochs routinely saw well over 99% of vote participation. The decline in vote participation roughly matches the share of validators using the Prysm consensus client, estimated at 22.71% on Wednesday, before falling to 18% after the incident. This suggests that the attestation failure was likely concentrated among Prysm validators. The Ethereum Foundation and Prysm developer organization Offchain Labs had not answered Cointelegraph’s request for comment by publication. Brushing with finality loss If voting participation falls below two-thirds of the total staked Ether (ETH), the Ethereum network loses finality. Under Ethereum’s design, blocks can still be produced in that scenario, but the chain is no longer considered finalized. As a likely consequence of such an outage, layer-2 bridges would freeze, rollups would pause withdrawals, and exchanges would increase their block confirmation requirements amid heightened risk of chain reorganization. A similar incident that could lead to Ethereum losing finality is not purely theoretical. In early May 2023, the Ethereum mainnet lost finality — an incident that occurred twice within 24 hours due to bugs in the handling of old-target attestations in the Prysm and Teku consensus clients. The incident could have led to much worse consequences, since Prysm was estimated by its developers to run on over two-thirds of the consensus nodes back in September 2021. Data shared in January 2022 by Michael Sproul, a developer working on the current majority consensus client, Lighthouse, showed that Prysm was running on 68.1% of nodes. Client diversity is still insufficient While Ethereum consensus client diversity has made some progress since 2022, it is still far from achieving a client count under 33%, a limit that would ensure that a bug in a single client is not enough to halt network finality. Current MigaLabs data indicates that Lighthouse alone accounts for 52.55% of consensus nodes, with Prysm in second place at 18%. That represents a deterioration from before the incident, when Lighthouse was below 48.5% and Prysm around 22.71%, according to MigaLabs. Ethereum educator Anthony Sassano noted in an X post that “if Lighthouse had had the bug instead, then the network would’ve lost finalization.”

Ethereum sees 25% validation drop post-Fusaka as Prysm bug nears finality loss

Shortly after the Fusaka network upgrade, the Ethereum network saw a sharp drop in validator participation after a bug in the Prysm consensus client knocked a chunk of votes offline.
According to a Thursday Prysm announcement, version v7.0.0 of the client unnecessarily generated old states while processing outdated attestations, a flaw that Prysm core developer Terence Tsao said prevented the nodes from functioning correctly. Developers recommended that users launch the client with the “--disable-last-epoch-targets” flag as a temporary workaround.
Beaconcha.in network data shows that at epoch 411,448, the network achieved only 75% sync participation (the percentage of 512 randomly selected nodes signing chain heads) and 74.7% voting participation. Voting participation being down 25% is under 9% shy of the network losing the two-thirds supermajority needed to maintain finality and regular operation.
At the time of writing, the current Ethereum network epoch (411,712) is experiencing nearly 99% voting participation and has reached 97% sync participation, indicating that the network has recovered. Prior to the issue, epochs routinely saw well over 99% of vote participation.
The decline in vote participation roughly matches the share of validators using the Prysm consensus client, estimated at 22.71% on Wednesday, before falling to 18% after the incident. This suggests that the attestation failure was likely concentrated among Prysm validators.

The Ethereum Foundation and Prysm developer organization Offchain Labs had not answered Cointelegraph’s request for comment by publication.
Brushing with finality loss
If voting participation falls below two-thirds of the total staked Ether (ETH), the Ethereum network loses finality. Under Ethereum’s design, blocks can still be produced in that scenario, but the chain is no longer considered finalized.
As a likely consequence of such an outage, layer-2 bridges would freeze, rollups would pause withdrawals, and exchanges would increase their block confirmation requirements amid heightened risk of chain reorganization.
A similar incident that could lead to Ethereum losing finality is not purely theoretical. In early May 2023, the Ethereum mainnet lost finality — an incident that occurred twice within 24 hours due to bugs in the handling of old-target attestations in the Prysm and Teku consensus clients.
The incident could have led to much worse consequences, since Prysm was estimated by its developers to run on over two-thirds of the consensus nodes back in September 2021. Data shared in January 2022 by Michael Sproul, a developer working on the current majority consensus client, Lighthouse, showed that Prysm was running on 68.1% of nodes.

Client diversity is still insufficient
While Ethereum consensus client diversity has made some progress since 2022, it is still far from achieving a client count under 33%, a limit that would ensure that a bug in a single client is not enough to halt network finality. Current MigaLabs data indicates that Lighthouse alone accounts for 52.55% of consensus nodes, with Prysm in second place at 18%.

That represents a deterioration from before the incident, when Lighthouse was below 48.5% and Prysm around 22.71%, according to MigaLabs.
Ethereum educator Anthony Sassano noted in an X post that “if Lighthouse had had the bug instead, then the network would’ve lost finalization.”
good
good
akafarazdanny
--
get it beginners!
Family, December is a decision month. We are entering the final phase of the cycle where alts will either expand or get drained of liquidity. Positioning now matters. 📌 Deadline: December 6th, 2025 📌 Slots: 30 Alts. 📌 Criteria: ✔ Solid liquidity and clean structure ✔ Active narrative or ecosystem ✖ No dead or illiquid tokens Only projects that fit the broader cycle and technical framework will be analyzed. As BTC completes dominance, rotation into alts becomes critical this is where future winners emerge. Drop your suggestions below. Every pick counts. If this resonates, like, share and let’s build the December list. $ETH {spot}(ETHUSDT)
Family, December is a decision month. We are entering the final phase of the cycle where alts will either expand or get drained of liquidity. Positioning now matters.

📌 Deadline: December 6th, 2025
📌 Slots: 30 Alts.

📌 Criteria:
✔ Solid liquidity and clean structure
✔ Active narrative or ecosystem
✖ No dead or illiquid tokens

Only projects that fit the broader cycle and technical framework will be analyzed. As BTC completes dominance, rotation into alts becomes critical this is where future winners emerge.

Drop your suggestions below. Every pick counts.

If this resonates, like, share and let’s build the December list.
$ETH
Huge W bro 😎🔥 $BOB + $TURBO = 🚀💰 $5K in under 12hrs = clean execution + strong momentum play 👏 Keep managing risk… next setups loading 📈✨
Huge W bro 😎🔥
$BOB + $TURBO = 🚀💰
$5K in under 12hrs = clean execution + strong momentum play 👏

Keep managing risk… next setups loading 📈✨
$ZEC Buy Zone: 330 – 340 Stop-Loss: 306 Targets: T1: 360 T2: 380 T3: 440 Go and Buy #zec
$ZEC Buy Zone: 330 – 340
Stop-Loss: 306
Targets:
T1: 360
T2: 380
T3: 440
Go and Buy #zec
I am 22 and feel Great 😃 Now your turn 👇👇$ETH $SOL
I am 22 and feel Great 😃 Now your turn 👇👇$ETH $SOL
Today Looser in bullish Market
Today Looser in bullish Market
...
...
MRT Trader
--
my $ZEC loss is huge 😭😭😭😭
what's you think 🤔 hold or close ?
$LIGHT Again Recharging and Next pump is expected Trade Setup: Entry Zone: $1.50 – $1.52 Target 1: $1.62 Target 2: $1.72 Stop-Loss: $1.37
$LIGHT Again Recharging and Next pump is expected
Trade Setup:
Entry Zone: $1.50 – $1.52
Target 1: $1.62
Target 2: $1.72
Stop-Loss: $1.37
my $ZEC loss is huge 😭😭😭😭 what's you think 🤔 hold or close ?
my $ZEC loss is huge 😭😭😭😭
what's you think 🤔 hold or close ?
Go Go Go Do Not read it 😡 Here are real gems that's can change your portfolio, $CHESS $PARTI and $TURBO Go and Trade
Go Go Go Do Not read it 😡
Here are real gems that's can change your portfolio, $CHESS $PARTI and $TURBO
Go and Trade
thankyou for your love 💓
thankyou for your love 💓
MRT Trader
--
A Beginner’s Guide to Candlestick Patterns
There are two basic forms of information that traders rely on: fundamental analysis (FA), the study of a company’s financial books and ratios, and technical analysis (TA), the study of a stock’s price behavior. With FA, the aim is to identify undervalued companies that should grow in the future, while TA aims to predict future price action based on past behavior. To do this, traders track candlestick patterns. In this article, we’ll explain how to read candles and cover the 37 most essential patterns that every active trader and chartist needs to know.
Common Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet

What is a candlestick pattern?

To understand candle patterns, you must know how to read a candle.Candlesticks themselves contain a wealth of information. Ever since they were invented in the 1700s by Japanese rice traders, they’ve helped investors and traders everywhere visualize price action. Here are the components of a candle:[1]Duration. This one isn’t actually on the candle, but the duration of your chart determines the duration of the candle, so it’s important to keep in mind. For example, on a weekly chart, a single candle represents one week. On a daily chart, a candle represents one day, etc.Body. The body of the candle refers to the filled-in blocky part that makes up most of the candle itself.The top and bottom of a candle represent where the price started and closed.Color. The color of the candle determines whether the price went up or down.A red candle started the trading period at the top of the candle and closed the trading period at the bottom.A green candle is the opposite. The bottom of the candle is where trading started and the trading period closed at the top of the body.Size. The size tells you how far the price moved from open to close.A small candle represents relatively little price movement.A large candle represents a lot of price movement.Wick. The wick is the little line that pops out of the top and bottom of the candle’s body. Wicks represent the peaks of that trading period’s price level.A short wick means the price didn’t move very far away from the opening or closing price (depending on the color).A long wick means the price moved well outside of the range of the open or close (depending on the color).
Single Candlestick Patterns
DojiA doji has basically no body, indicating the open and close price were basically identical. The size of the wick may indicate how much volatility occurred over the session, but this neutral candle often indicates uncertainty (or lack of trading interest).[2]Bullish or bearish? Neutral.Dragonfly dojiA dragonfly doji refers to a doji with an extremely long bottom-side wick, indicating there was a of intrasession price action below the open and close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Gravestone dojiAlso known as the inverted dragonfly, this doji has a long wick above the body. This is universally noted as bearish, since it means there was a larger attempt for the price to move higher that ultimately failed.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.HammerA hammer is always green. It has a small body with a wick sticking out through the bottom of the candle. That wick may be relatively short or kind of on the longer side.[3]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Inverted hammerPeople assume the inverted hammer is bearish since it’s the “opposite” of a hammer, but it’s not. The green body with the wick on top indicates the market is trying to push the price higher, even if there might have been a return to lower levels heading into close.Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Hanging manThe hanging man looks identical to the hammer except it can be red or green. The key with the hanging man is when it appears. It only counts as a hanging man candle if it appears after a dedicated uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.The hanging man is often considered a potential reversal indicator, meaning that it’s possible the uptrend will become a downtrend.Bullish spinning topNicknamed the spinning top after its shape (it looks kind of like a children’s top), the bullish spinning top has a small, green body and a wick sticking out of both ends. It can only appear after a prolonged downtrend.Bullish or bearish? Bullish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bearish spinning topThe bearish spinning top is the inverse of a bullish spinning top—it’s just a red body and it appears after a prolonged uptrend.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. Also, a reversal indicator.Bullish MarubozuThe bullish Marubozu stands out prominently on charts. It's got a very large body and no wick on either side (or an extremely tiny wick). The bullish Marubozu is a huge sign that the market is moving with conviction in one direction.[4]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish MarubozuThe only difference between the bullish and the bearish Marubozu is the color of the body. The bullish version is green; the bearish version is red.[5]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
Double Candlestick Patterns
Bullish kickerThe bullish kicker occurs when a red candle is followed immediately by a green candle with a gap between the two.[6]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a gap? A gap refers to a specific phenomenon that occurs between candlesticks. Normally, one candle overlaps with the next one, indicating that the price is moving in increments. A gap occurs when there’s open space separating one candle and another. This occurs when the price jumps way up (or way down) between sessions.Bearish kickerA bearish kicker is the opposite of a bullish kicker—a green candle is followed by a red candle that gaps down.[7]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Bullish engulfingA bullish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle follows a red candle. The “engulfing” part is where the green candle is bigger than the red candle in terms of the body. The green candle has a lower low and a higher high.[8]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Bearish engulfingThe bearish engulfing candle occurs when a green candle is completely engulfed by a larger red candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is widely accepted as a reversal pattern.Piercing lineThe piercing line is one of the more difficult patterns to spot just because it seems kind of innocuous at first. It requires a long red candle with short wicks, followed by a smaller green candle that punctures the base of the previous candle’s bottom.[9]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered a reversal pattern.Dark cloud coverDark cloud cover is the opposite of a piercing line—a green candle with a large body is followed by a red candle with a smaller body. The top of the red candle must be higher than the top of the green candle, and the bottom of the red candle must hit roughly around the midpoint of the green candle.[10]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is also a reversal pattern.Tweezer bottomThe tweezer bottom is easy to spot by the two long wicks that stop at the same price level. This pattern also must occur at the bottom of a downtrend, and the two candles must have relatively similar tops. The first candle must be red and the second candle must be green.[11]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is also considered to be a reversal pattern.Tweezer topThe tweezer top is the inverse of the tweezer bottom. Two long wicks must sit at the same price level, the first candle must be green, and the second candle must be red. Also, this pattern only counts if it appears at the top of an uptrend.[12]Bullish or bearish? Bearish. This is a reversal pattern.Bullish HaramiThe bullish Harami is noted by its large red candle, followed by an engulfed green candle. The green candle must be small, and there must be a wick hanging from the bottom of the candle.[13]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish HaramiThe bearish Harami requires a large green candle followed by an engulfed red candle with a tiny wick on top.[14]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
Triple Candlestick Patterns
Morning starThe morning star pattern is considered a classic reversal pattern. It is noted by a substantial red candle, a smaller green candle that gaps down, and a larger green candle that gaps up. The last candle must close higher than the midpoint of the first candle.[15]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bullish abandoned babyIf you see a substantial red candle and a gap down to a green doji followed by a gap up and a huge green candle, you’re looking at a bullish abandoned baby. You can remember this pattern by noting that the tiny doji looks like it has been “abandoned” by the red and green “parents” above it.[16]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Bearish abandoned babyThe bearish abandoned baby is the reverse of the bullish abandoned baby. The first candle is green, the “baby” will be a doji floating above, and the last candle below will be red.[17]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three white soldiersThree white soldiers is pretty easy to remember because it's just three green candles. The candles must all be green and either matching or drifting upwards.[18]Bullish or bearish? Bullish. This is considered one of the more consistent patterns in TA.Three black crowsThree black crows is the opposite of three white soldiers. You’ve got three red candles with large bodies all matching levels or slowly drifting downward.[19]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three line strikeThree line strike is actually a four-candle pattern. It is sort of an extension of the three black crows or three white soldiers and is considered a reversal pattern. It occurs when a large engulfing candle overtakes the three previous candles of a different color. So, with three white soldiers, you’d need a large red candle to overtake the previous three. With three black crows, you’d need a giant green candle to overtake the previous three.[20]Bullish or bearish? Depends on the trend.
Larger Patterns

Cup and handleThe cup and handle is a larger pattern consisting usually of 20+ candles. It appears kind of like an old school coffee cup: there’s a large downtrend that smooths out at the bottom of the “cup.” Then, there’s an uptrend that matches the downtrend symmetrically. At the end of the “cup,” a sharp downturn marks the “handle,” which is often followed by a new bullish trend.[21]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Double topA double top simply refers to any extended series of candles where the peak of the uptrend stops at a specific price level twice. These are typically easy to spot because the wicks will poke out from the chart and touch the same price level twice.[22]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Double bottomThe inverse of the double top is the double bottom. It’s any pattern where two wicks in a channel touch down at the same price level.[23]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.WedgeWedges are a type of channel. They are noted by an upward or downward trend where the channel slowly feeds down into a narrower point. As the wedge tightens, it gets closer to a decision area where the trend can break up or down.[24]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. The shape of the wedge can help you identify confirmations and reversals, but the wedges themselves aren’t bearish or bullish.What is a channel? A channel is sort of like a lane on a road. It refers to two lines that contain all of the price action in an area. The edges of a channel are often the source of resistance or support points.FlagFlags, also known as pennants, are a kind of extremely tight wedge that often appears after large moves up or down. The shape of the flag is more of a triangular boat flag as opposed to a standard national flag.[25]Bullish or bearish? Neutral. Flags don’t signal anything other than decision points where investors and traders are unsure of what to do.
Confirmation Patterns

Rising windowThe rising window is a two-candle confirmation signal that occurs when a candle gaps up past a support or resistance line following an uptrend.[26]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.What is a confirmation? In technical analysis, a confirmation refers to any event which affirms the previous signal. So, take three white soldiers—a classic bullish signal. If the three white soldiers sit on a resistance line and then a rising window breaks that line, it is considered a confirmation—the bullish trend is set to continue.Falling windowThe falling window (sometimes casually and incorrectly called a falling dagger) is the reverse of a rising window. It’s a two-candle confirmation that breaks a trend or support/resistance line by gapping down past it.[27]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three inside upFollowing a period of consolidation or a downward trend, you can spot a reversal confirmation with the three inside up pattern. This is a large red candle, a smaller green candle that sits around the base of the first candle, and then a green candle rising above the first candle's high.[28]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three inside downThree inside down is the bearish version of the three inside up. A large green candle is followed by a rising red candle, then a red candle that breaks the previous low of the initial green candle.[29]Bullish or bearish? Bearish.Three outside upThree outside up is a bullish confirmation signal that requires a red candle, an engulfing green candle, and a third green candle with a midpoint higher than the top of the previous candle.[30]Bullish or bearish? Bullish.Three outside downThree outside down is the reverse of the three outside up. A green candle is engulfed by a large red candle, then there’s a third red candle trending down and passing the base of the engulfing candle.Bullish or bearish? Bearish.
$ETH
{spot}(ETHUSDT)
$BTC
{spot}(BTCUSDT)
$VRA showing Bullish Take and trade #VRA Buy trade: 0.00034000 – 0.00036000 Bullish Above: 0.00035500 Targets: TP1: 0.00037000 TP2: 0.00042000 TP3: 0.00046000 Stop Loss: 0.0003O000
$VRA showing Bullish Take and trade #VRA
Buy trade: 0.00034000 – 0.00036000
Bullish Above: 0.00035500
Targets:
TP1: 0.00037000
TP2: 0.00042000
TP3: 0.00046000
Stop Loss: 0.0003O000
KEY EVENTS THIS WEEK 🎙️ ▫️ Tue, Nov 25 — PPI Inflation Data ▫️ Wed, Nov 26 — Initial Jobless Claims ▫️ Wed, Nov 26 — PCE Inflation Data ▫️ Thu, Nov 27 — U.S. Markets Closed (Thanksgiving) ▫️ Fri, Nov 28 — Early Market Close (Holiday Schedule)
KEY EVENTS THIS WEEK 🎙️

▫️ Tue, Nov 25 — PPI Inflation Data
▫️ Wed, Nov 26 — Initial Jobless Claims
▫️ Wed, Nov 26 — PCE Inflation Data
▫️ Thu, Nov 27 — U.S. Markets Closed (Thanksgiving)
▫️ Fri, Nov 28 — Early Market Close (Holiday Schedule)
Bitcoin Weakens After H&S Pattern: Next Stop, 89k?It looks like price recently formed a pretty clean Head & Shoulders pattern on the 15m timeframe. The left shoulder, head, and right shoulder are all well-defined, and price has already broken beneath the neckline with a clear shift in structure. Momentum is leaning bearish. The chart also shows a large supply zone above (the red area), which rejected price strongly adding confluence that the top may be in for now. The projections on the chart make sense: if the neckline continues to hold as resistance, we could see a move down toward the blue demand zone around 88.7k–89k. That’s the next major liquidity pool and likely where buyers might step in again. Unless price reclaims the neckline with strength, the bias stays short-term bearish with continuation lower.

Bitcoin Weakens After H&S Pattern: Next Stop, 89k?

It looks like price recently formed a pretty clean Head & Shoulders pattern on the 15m timeframe. The left shoulder, head, and right shoulder are all well-defined, and price has already broken beneath the neckline with a clear shift in structure. Momentum is leaning bearish.

The chart also shows a large supply zone above (the red area), which rejected price strongly adding confluence that the top may be in for now.

The projections on the chart make sense: if the neckline continues to hold as resistance, we could see a move down toward the blue demand zone around 88.7k–89k. That’s the next major liquidity pool and likely where buyers might step in again.

Unless price reclaims the neckline with strength, the bias stays short-term bearish with continuation lower.
BITCOIN Two realistic bullish targets before Bear Cycle resumes?Bitcoin (BTCUSD) has more likely than not entered a new Bull Cycle, a subject that we've covered extensively over the past 2 months. As discussed however, there is no reason not to expect technical rallies here and there, practically as we've shown those are quite common in the basic Bear Cycle structure. Historically, moreover, bullish rallies of Bear Cycles have been on average more aggressive than those during Bull Cycles. So now that the intro is over, let's move to the main course. BTC's sell-off since its October 06 $126400 All Time High (ATH) has been a Bearish Leg similar to the previous major correction of January 20 - April 07. In fact it technically seems that they are both a part of a Channel Up. Having also just completed a 1D MACD Bullish Cross as in March (though that structure made one final Low), it appears as if the first counter-trend rally of this Bull Cycle that we've talked about in the past 10 days, may materialize. In fact, it is already under way and as we've shown in past analyses, it aims and is restricted by the 1D MA200 (orange trend-line), which is the natural technical Resistance during Bear Cycles. If it actually repeats the Jan - April 2025 correction, it should now test the 1D MA50 (blue trend-line) on the Lower Highs trend-line, which has been the Resistance during these past 2 months. That strong immediate Resistance Cluster also has the 0.382 Fibonacci level, which is also where the April rebound got rejected and consolidated for a few days. As a result, Target 1 is at $95850. The second and final (over extended) Target of this is, as mentioned the 1D MA200, outside of the Lower Highs trend-line. A target scenario for this, where the price could make marginal contact with the 1D MA200, is $106450. This is where the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement level is, which was also Target 2 for the April fractal and where the second consolidation took place. Do you think that is a likely roadmap for the first rally of the Bear Cycle? Feel free to let us know in the comments section below! --- Please LIKE 👍, FOLLOW ✅, SHARE 🙌 and COMMENT ✍ if you enjoy this idea! Also share your ideas and charts in the comments section below! This is best way to keep it relevant, support us, keep the content here free and allow the idea to reach as many people as possible.

BITCOIN Two realistic bullish targets before Bear Cycle resumes?

Bitcoin (BTCUSD) has more likely than not entered a new Bull Cycle, a subject that we've covered extensively over the past 2 months.

As discussed however, there is no reason not to expect technical rallies here and there, practically as we've shown those are quite common in the basic Bear Cycle structure. Historically, moreover, bullish rallies of Bear Cycles have been on average more aggressive than those during Bull Cycles.

So now that the intro is over, let's move to the main course. BTC's sell-off since its October 06 $126400 All Time High (ATH) has been a Bearish Leg similar to the previous major correction of January 20 - April 07. In fact it technically seems that they are both a part of a Channel Up. Having also just completed a 1D MACD Bullish Cross as in March (though that structure made one final Low), it appears as if the first counter-trend rally of this Bull Cycle that we've talked about in the past 10 days, may materialize.

In fact, it is already under way and as we've shown in past analyses, it aims and is restricted by the 1D MA200 (orange trend-line), which is the natural technical Resistance during Bear Cycles. If it actually repeats the Jan - April 2025 correction, it should now test the 1D MA50 (blue trend-line) on the Lower Highs trend-line, which has been the Resistance during these past 2 months.

That strong immediate Resistance Cluster also has the 0.382 Fibonacci level, which is also where the April rebound got rejected and consolidated for a few days. As a result, Target 1 is at $95850.

The second and final (over extended) Target of this is, as mentioned the 1D MA200, outside of the Lower Highs trend-line. A target scenario for this, where the price could make marginal contact with the 1D MA200, is $106450. This is where the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement level is, which was also Target 2 for the April fractal and where the second consolidation took place.

Do you think that is a likely roadmap for the first rally of the Bear Cycle? Feel free to let us know in the comments section below!

---

Please LIKE 👍, FOLLOW ✅, SHARE 🙌 and COMMENT ✍ if you enjoy this idea! Also share your ideas and charts in the comments section below! This is best way to keep it relevant, support us, keep the content here free and allow the idea to reach as many people as possible.
Finally my all positions Go in profit 😉😁
Finally my all positions Go in profit 😉😁
$ZEC Ready Again for a Fresh Long Entry 🚀🔥
$ZEC Ready Again for a Fresh Long Entry 🚀🔥
I just opened new $ZEC position worth 20K and waiting for big profit
I just opened new $ZEC position worth 20K and waiting for big profit
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