🎁TA Education 5|6 Common MA Patterns — Which One Do You Find Most Useful?
@Tiger_chat:
Hello, Tiger! Welcome to the fifth episode of our Technical Analysis series. Let‘s look at 6 commons patterns of MA! 1. Upward & Downward Breakouts: Releasing Market Sentiment The Pattern: This occurs when the price candle forcibly crosses the Moving Average line after a period of interaction. Market Logic: Upward Breakout: The price surges above the MA. This signals that market sentiment has shifted from hesitation to conviction, breaking the "average cost" resistance. Downward Breakout: The price plunges below the MA. This indicates panic or profit-taking, as the "average cost" support level has failed to hold. 2. Bullish & Bearish Alignment (Perfect Order): Cracking the MA Code The Pattern: This refers to the specific ordering of multiple Moving Averages (Short, Medium, and Long-term). Market Logic: Bullish Alignment: Short-term MA > Medium-term MA > Long-term MA. All lines are sloping up. This confirms a strong, healthy Uptrend. Bearish Alignment: Short-term MA < Medium-term MA < Long-term MA. All lines are sloping down. This confirms a strong, dominant Downtrend. 3. Golden Cross & Death Cross: Basic Indicator Forms The Pattern: The intersection of a shorter-term MA and a longer-term MA. Market Logic: Golden Cross: The short-term MA crosses above the long-term MA. This is a classic long-term Buy Signal, suggesting momentum has shifted to the upside. Death Cross: The short-term MA crosses below the long-term MA. This is a classic long-term Sell Signal, warning of a potential bear market. 4. Shallow & Deep Entanglement (Whipsaws): Consolidation vs. Reversal The Pattern: The MAs are not sloping clearly but are twisting or braiding around the price. Market Logic: Shallow Entanglement: Often represents a brief "rest" or sideways consolidation in a trend. The market is taking a breath. Deep Entanglement: Represents a fierce battle between buyers and sellers. The trend is undefined, and the market is deciding whether to continue or reverse. This is often a "No Trade Zone." 5. Low & High Convergence (The Squeeze): Critical Turning Points The Pattern: Multiple MAs (Short, Medium, Long) converge tightly together at a specific price level, appearing "glued" or "sticky." Market Logic: Low-Level Convergence: MAs bunch together at price lows. This implies volatility compression and accumulation; a violent upward explosion is often imminent. High-Level Convergence: MAs bunch together at price highs. This implies distribution; the market is running out of steam and a downward collapse may follow. 6. Divergence: Short-Bull/Long-Bear & Short-Bear/Long-Bull: Rationalizing Conflicting Signals The Pattern: The short-term trend contradicts the long-term trend (e.g., Short-term MA is rising, but Long-term MA is falling). Market Logic: Short-Bull / Long-Bear: This is usually a "correction" or rally within a larger downtrend. It is risky to buy here as the macro trend is still down. Short-Bear / Long-Bull: This is usually a "pullback" or dip within a larger uptrend. This often presents a buying opportunity once the pullback stabilizes. Tomorrow we’ll be releasing Part 2 of our MA Series — stay tuned! 🎉 You’re welcome to share your stock analysis in the comments based on the six MA patterns we covered today. Have you spotted any classic golden crosses/death crosses or divergence setups? Does any stock on your watchlist show MA patterns that match what we learned? Or do you have your own way of combining MAs with other technical indicators? Leave a comment to earn 10 Tiger Coins, and you’ll also have a chance to win a $5 stock voucher each week! For the past lessons, you can click to read: TA Education 1|Understand Market Signals! How to Spot $MSFT & $TSLA's Uptrend? TA Education 2|How to Spot 2 Common Bearish Patterns? TA Education 3|2 Common Bearish Patterns - How to Spot Misleading Signals? TA Education 4|How to apply MA indicators in live-trading?
Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.
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