Profiting With Gartley Patterns

Bearish
Gartley





Bearish Gartley:
A Recent Example



 

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Bullish
Gartley





A
Recent Example of a Bullish Gartley Pattern



So why does this pattern work so well?

This is purely opinion, but as you look at the pattern
construction there are two key elements to the success of this pattern.

Let’s put it in the context of a Bullish Gartley
Pattern:

A)   
You are trading with the overall trend. Note that the move
from X to A is a large move up, and that the move against the trend from A to D
is counter to that of the XA move, but is contained within XA so the trend up is
not broken. In fact, in Elliott Wave world the translation of this pattern is
that we have one Impulse wave up from X to A, then three corrective moves to the
downside (AB, BC, and CD). The conclusion then from Elliott Wave would be the
likelihood for another impulse wave to the upside.

B)    
Secondly, the reason this pattern is successful is that it
is a bit of a “trap.” Let’s look at this step by step from swing point A.

a.      
After establishing swing point A price drops down to B and
forms a swing low. Psychologically traders see this as a defining point and
start to accumulate positions on the long side.

b.     
As price climbs and forms a swing high C the positions are
established and many stops are placed under the swing low B point. In fact,
short sellers are even starting to look at this swing B point as a potential
area to short if price comes back down.

c.      
As the pattern plays out and price starts coming down from
swing high C, the longs are getting nervous and the shorts and sitting in the
background ready to pounce. Then Whammo! Price goes below the swing low B and
all of a sudden the weak long traders start selling and the short players begin
to sell ‘em creating additional momentum to the downside that ultimately takes
us down to ideally around the .786 retracement of swing XA. This is a defining
point for the stock/commodity. This is where the Gartley pattern screams to look
for opportunity to buy…why? Partly due to the fact that you are
psychologically going against the market at this point.

d.     
If swing D holds above X and price starts to creep up
traders get a little uptight. Then as price goes back above swing low point B
the weak short players cover and the longs that got shook out come back in and
you’re long position is enjoying the ride from this psychological shake out.

So, to conclude, the pattern
has been successful for so many years, in my opinion because it trades WITH the
trend (in the context of the XA move), AND it capitalizes on the psychological
aspects of traders.  This is a
pattern that I think every trader should be aware of and in many cases should
incorporate into their trading plan.

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