The Harami pattern is composed of two candles. The body of the first candle is the same color as the current trend, normally black or red for a downtrending market and white or green for an uptrending market. The first candle of the pattern has a long body, the second candles body is shorter. The open and the close of the second candle occurs inside the open and the close of the first candle. The presence of an Harami indicates that a trend may be over.

Because the harami indicates that the trend could be reversing, it signals that it might be a good time to enter into a trading position in line with the reversal. The smaller the second candlestick, the more likely the reversal. In the case of the bullish harami; the higher the second candle closes up on the first candle the more likely the reversal has occured. For the bearish harami, the opposite is the case; the lower the second candle closes down on the first, the more likely the reversal.

 

bullharami Trading the Harami

The Bullish Harami (bearish Harami is exact opposite)

These patterns need confirmation and should not be seen as a complete reversal. Unless you are a very aggressive trader, a confirmation of the reversal should be seen before committing to a trade.

This article does not represent an in depth study of this pattern, so I would suggest further study before using it in your trading.

Related articles:

  1. Trading the Doji
  2. The Importance of Reversal Signals
  3. The Anatomy of a Candlestick Pattern
  4. How Candlestick Patterns can reflect Investor Sentiment
  5. The Four Principles of Successful Trading

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