
Triple Bottom Pattern: A PRO’s Guide to Market Reversals
A triple bottom is a bullish reversal pattern of three equal lows after a downtrend. Learn how to identify, confirm, and trade the breakout with volume.

A triple bottom is a bullish reversal pattern of three equal lows after a downtrend. Learn how to identify, confirm, and trade the breakout with volume.

A bullish engulfing pattern is a two-candle reversal signal. Learn how to identify it, confirm it with volume and support, and trade it with discipline.

Learn to spot, confirm, and trade the inverse head and shoulders pattern: three troughs, a neckline breakout on strong volume, plus entry and stop rules.

An Ending Diagonal is a five-wave Elliott Wave wedge that marks trend exhaustion. Learn its rules, ascending and descending types, and how to spot reversals.

Bullish divergence forms when price makes lower lows but RSI or MACD makes higher lows. Learn the types by strength and how to trade entries, stops, and targets.

Exaggerated divergences form when price prints equal highs or lows while the indicator diverges, signaling a weakening trend and a possible reversal.

Hidden divergence signals trend continuation: price and an oscillator like RSI or MACD diverge on a pullback. Learn to spot and trade it with clear steps.

Bullish divergence with MACD is when price makes lower lows but MACD makes higher lows. Learn how to spot, confirm, and trade this reversal signal.

Bullish hidden divergence is when price makes a higher low and the oscillator a lower low, signaling uptrend continuation. Learn to spot and trade it.

Bullish divergence is when price makes a lower low but RSI or MACD makes a higher low, signaling weakening downside momentum and a possible reversal.

A double bottom is a bullish reversal pattern with two equal lows. Learn how to confirm the neckline breakout, set stops, and project price targets.

A triple bottom is a bullish reversal of three equal lows. Learn how to confirm the breakout and set entry, stop loss, and take profit levels.