How to Day Trade for a Living: Tools, Tactics, Money Management, Discipline and Trading Psychology

Aziz, Andrew
Chapter 6:
Introduction to Candlesticks
To understand my strategies in the next chapter, we need to quickly review the concept of price action and the fundamentals of candlestick charts. The Japanese began using technical analysis and some early versions of candlesticks to trade rice in the 17th century. Much of the credit for candlestick development and charting goes to a legendary rice trader named Homma from the town of Sakata, Japan. While these early versions of technical analysis and candlestick charts were different from today’s version, many of the guiding principles are very similar. Candlestick charting, as we know it today, first appeared sometime after 1850. It is likely that Homma’s original ideas were modified and refined over many years of trading, eventually resulting in the system of candlestick charting that we now use.
In order to create a candlestick chart, you must have a data set that contains (1) opening price, (2) highest price in the chosen time frame, (3) lowest price in that period, and (4) closing price values for each time period you want to display. The time frame can be daily, 1-hour, 5-minute, 1-minute, or any other period you prefer. The hollow (white) or filled (red) portion of the candlestick is called “the body ”. The long thin lines above and below the body represent the high/low range and are called “shadows ” (also referred to as “wicks ” and “tails ”). The high is marked by the top of the upper shadow and the low by the bottom of the lower shadow. Two examples follow in Figure 6.1. If the stock closes higher than its opening price, a hollow candlestick is drawn with the bottom of the body representing the opening price and the top of the body representing the closing price. If the stock closes lower than its opening price, a filled (usually red) candlestick is drawn with the top of the body representing the opening price and the bottom of the body representing the closing price.
Figure 6.1 - Candlestick examples.
Besides candlestick charting, there are other styles for representing price action including bars, lines, and point and figure. I personally however consider candlestick charts more visually appealing and easier to interpret. Each candlestick provides an easy-to-decipher picture of price action. A trader can immediately compare the relationship between the open and close as well as the high and low. The relationship between the open and close is considered vital information and forms the essence of candlesticks .
Here is my ninth day trading rule:
Rule 9: Hollow candlesticks, where the close is greater than the open, indicate buying pressure. Filled candlesticks, where the close is less than the open, indicate selling pressure.

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