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THE CANDLESTICK TRADING BIBLE
-The engulfing bar strategy
-The
inside bar strategy
-The inside bar false breakout strategy
-Trades
examples
I highly recommend you to master the previous sections before
jumping to this section, because if you don’t master the basics, you will
not be able to use these strategies as effective as it would be.
In this section you will learn how to identify high probability setups in
the market, and how to use these candlestick
patterns in trending
markets and ranging markets to maximize your profits.
6-Money management
In this section, you will learn how to create a money management and
risk control plan that will allow you to protect your trading capital and
become consistently profitable.
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THE CANDLESTICK TRADING BIBLE
History of candlesticks
Candlesticks have been around a lot longer than anything similar in the
Western world.
The Japanese were looking at charts as far back as the 17th century,
whereas the earliest known charts in the US appeared in the late 19th
century.
Rice trading had been established in Japan in 1654, with gold, silver
and rape seed oil following soon after.
Rice markets dominated Japan at
this time and the commodity
became, it seems, more important than hard currency.
Munehisa Homma (aka Sokyu Honma), a Japanese rice trader born in
the early 1700s, is widely credited as being one of the early exponents
of tracking price action.
He understood basic supply and demand dynamics, but also identified
the fact that emotion played a part in the setting of price.
He wanted to track the emotion of the market players, and this work
became the basis of candlestick analysis.
He was extremely well respected, to the point of being promoted to
Samurai status.
The Japanese did an extremely good job of keeping candlesticks quiet
from the Western world, right up until the 1980s, when suddenly there
was a large cross-pollination of banks and financial institutions around
the world.
This is when Westerners suddenly got wind of these mystical charts.
Obviously, this was also about the time that charting in general
suddenly
became a lot easier, due to the widespread use of the PC.
In the late 1980s several Western analysts became interested in
candlesticks.
In the UK Michael Feeny, who was then head of TA in