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اردو
Spotting True Market Reversals With Candle Bodies and Volume
Abstract:Beginner Forex traders often lose money by blindly trading candlestick patterns without looking at the underlying market context. This guide explains how to use candle body size, shadows, and trading volume to distinguish true market reversals from trap setups. The main takeaway is to never trade a pattern in isolation—always wait for a strong candle body and volume to confirm the move.

Many beginners memorize candlestick patterns like the Hammer or the Doji and assume they are guaranteed entry signals. You see a Morning Star, you buy, and then the market crashes right through your stop loss.
Why does this happen?
Usually, it is because beginners ignore two critical factors: the fullness of the candle's body and the trading volume behind it. A shape on a chart means nothing if there is no real money pushing it. Let's look at how to read price action properly to separate real market turns from false breakouts.
What the Body Size Actually Tells You
When you look at a price chart, the solid part of the candlestick—the body—tells you who won that specific session.
If you see patterns like the Doji or the Tri Star, where the body is extremely small, it means buyers and sellers are deadlocked. The market is hesitating. Many traders see a Doji and immediately guess the market will reverse, but a Doji only shows uncertainty, not a confirmed change in direction.
For a real reversal, you need to see a full, strong candle body. Take the Engulfing Pattern. A true bullish engulfing happens at the bottom of a downtrend when a large positive candle completely swallows the previous negative candle's body.
Or consider the Morning Star. In this setup, a large push downward is met by indecision, followed by a strong upward candle. For this to signal a real shift, that final upward candle must penetrate deeply—at least 50%—into the first downward candles body. The fuller the body, the stronger the market's conviction.
The Warning Signs in the Shadows
The thin lines extending from the bodies—the shadows or wicks—show us where prices went but failed to stay.
When you spot a Shooting Star at the top of an uptrend, or a Hanging Man, you will notice a small body with a very long shadow. A long upper shadow means buyers tried to push the price higher but were aggressively beaten back by sellers.
However, a pattern with a long shadow is a warning, not an immediate entry signal. If you spot a Hanging Man in an uptrend, you must wait for the next candle to confirm the downward move before you sell. Jumping in too early on a shadow alone often leads to getting caught in a trap.
Using Volume to Filter Out Fake Bounces
Price patterns can lie if the trading volume is missing. This is where volume or tick volume becomes your lie detector.
A classic trap is the Dead Cat Bounce. This happens during a sharp downtrend when the price suddenly rallies for a few days. Beginners rush in, thinking the bottom is in. But if you look closely, the trading volume during this bounce is low and declining. It is just a temporary pause caused by short-term profit-taking, not a true reversal.
Compare this to a Counterattack Line—where a strong downward candle is immediately met by an equally strong upward candle that closes at the exact same level. If this second candle is accompanied by a massive spike in volume, the reversal signal is much stronger. Heavy volume means big players are actually stepping in to defend that price level.
Recognizing When the Trend is Simply Taking a Break
Not every pause is a reversal. Sometimes, the market just needs to catch its breath before breaking out further.
The Rising Three Methods is a perfect example. In an uptrend, you might see one long positive candle followed by three small negative candles. To a panicked beginner, this looks like a collapse. But notice that the bodies of those small red candles stay entirely within the range of the first big green candle. This is just a holding period. Once a new strong positive candle breaks above this consolidation, the upward breakout continues.
Make a habit of looking at the whole picture. Whether you are analyzing major global currency pairs or trading local Malaysian equities—where knowing the difference between a private restricted company and a publicly traded Berhad (BHD) changes your risk profile—the rules of reading clear market information remain the same.
A candlestick pattern is only a suggestion until the candle body and volume prove the move is active. Focus on the size of the candle body and wait for confirmation before risking your capital. Because these reversal points can naturally be highly volatile, you should also ensure your broker executes trades smoothly without severe slippage. You can easily verify your brokers regulatory status on WikiFX to ensure your trading environment remains secure.


Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
