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Descending Triangles
The descending triangle is a triangular consolidation zone that has
a hypotenuse sloping downward at the top of the triangle.
Beneath the
hypotenuse is a straight trend line.
Generally, when the market breaks through this trend line, it is
seen as a signal that sellers have the momentum in the market, and that
shorting may be a good opportunity as a result. Accordingly, it can
reasonably be stated that the descending triangle usually appears in a
downward trending market and signals a continuation of the downward
trend.
Ascending Triangles
As you might expect, the ascending triangle usually appears in an
upward trend - and signals the continuation of the upward trend. The
ascending triangle is essentially an inverted descending triangle; it
has a hypotenuse that moves upward with time, above which is a straight
trend line that traders are eyeing carefully as a key resistance point.
When this confirmation of that resistance has broken is received, it
can be a signal that buyers have taken control of the market - hence
making it an ideal time to buy.
In the chart below, USD/CHF formed an ascending triangle over 5 days
before the release of an important economic data. The price tested the
resistant level 1.2545 for three times before breakthrough. On the
hypotenuse side, the buying momentum pushed the support level further
up which formed the converging ascending triangle. Once the economic
data was released, the price broke the resistance and shot further up.
The converging triangles, no matter descending or ascending,
represents the psychology of traders on the market. Before the
breakout, traders are not sure which direction the price will go, they
are trading with great caution, and thus, reflected by the narrow
trading range before the breakout. The range will get narrower as
traders are getting more cautious before the final breakout. Once the
direction of breakout is conformed, the followers will enter the market
following the direction, which forms the strong momentum after the
breakout.
Ultimately, the important signal provided by the triangle is not the
shape, though. The signal is provided by the direction of the breakout
from the triangle, which signals a continuation or sometimes a reversal
of the trend.
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