IFCCI

Important Chart Patterns

How to Trade Bearish and Bullish Pennants

3 分钟阅读第 10 课,共 20 课
50%

🎌 Pennants: Small Patterns, Big Moves

Pennants are continuation chart patterns — just like rectangles — that form after a strong price move in either direction.

After a sharp rise or drop, the market often pauses as traders catch their breath. During this pause, price consolidates into a small symmetrical triangle, which we call a pennant.

What Happens Next?

While price is consolidating inside the pennant, fresh buyers or sellers often jump in, fueling another breakout in the same direction as the original move.


📉 Bearish Pennant: Sellers Take a Breather… Then Strike Again

A bearish pennant forms during a steep downtrend.

After a strong drop, some sellers may lock in profits, while others prepare to jump in. This causes price to pause and form a pennant.

🖼️ Example: Bearish Pennant in Action

Once selling pressure builds up again, price breaks below the pennant, and the downtrend continues.

To trade this, you’d typically:

  • Place a sell order just below the pennant

  • Set a stop-loss above the top of the pennant

This way, if the breakout fails (a.k.a. a fakeout), you limit your losses.

💡 Unlike other patterns, where the breakout move is about the height of the pattern, pennants often lead to larger moves.

👉 Instead, measure the height of the initial sharp move (called the "mast") before the pennant formed — this gives you a better estimate of how far price might go after the breakout.


📈 Bullish Pennant: Bulls Rest Before Charging Higher

A bullish pennant forms during a strong uptrend.

After a quick surge, the bulls take a short breather. During this pause, price consolidates into a pennant… and then it’s off to the races again!

🖼️ Example: Bullish Pennant Breakout

After forming the pennant, the bulls regroup and push the price sharply higher once again.

To trade this setup:

  • Place a buy order just above the pennant

  • Put your stop-loss below the pennant’s bottom, in case of a fakeout

Just like with bearish pennants, use the mast height (the size of the move before the pennant) to estimate your profit target.


🧠 Key Takeaways

  • Pennants = strong continuation signals, not trend reversals.

  • They form after a big price move, followed by a brief consolidation.

  • Breakouts are typically fast and strong — don’t let their small size fool you.

  • Measure the mast (initial move) to project the likely breakout distance.

📣 Final thought:
These tiny triangles might seem insignificant, but when price breaks out of a pennant, it often bursts with energy.
So… don’t underestimate the power of the pennant! 💥

Knowledge Check

1. A bullish pennant pattern typically forms during which market condition?