Candles Are Evidence, Not Commands
Candlestick patterns are often presented as simple buy or sell signals, but that is not how they should be used. A candle is a record of market pressure during a period. It shows where price opened, where it traded, where it was rejected, and where it closed.
The same candlestick can mean different things depending on location. A rejection candle at major support carries more information than a similar candle in the middle of a range. Context decides whether the candle matters.

Useful Candlestick Structures
- Long lower wick: sellers pushed price down, but buyers absorbed supply.
- Long upper wick: buyers pushed price up, but sellers rejected higher value.
- Engulfing candle: a stronger close that absorbs the prior candle range.
- Small-body candle: indecision or transition, especially near a key level.
- Wide-body candle: strong directional participation during that period.
Continue the framework: The real value begins when the candle is placed inside structure, level quality and volatility, where price action becomes evidence rather than decoration.
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This material is provided for education and market understanding only. It is not personal investment advice, a recommendation to trade, or a guarantee of future performance.





