This article has been translated from English to Gen Z Slang.

What’s better than dual candlestick patterns?

TRIPLE candlestick patterns, fam!

To peep those triple Japanese candle game, scope out formations with three candlesticks all chillin' together.

These vibes help traders know where the price might be headed next, no cap.

Some three candlestick patterns be reversal patterns, which drop hints about the current trend saying "bye-bye" and a new one starting to flex.

And some other three candlestick patterns? They're continuation patterns, meaning there's just a quick hiatus, and then it's back to the current trend grind.

Let's dive into the lit triple Japanese candlestick patterns.

Evening and Morning Stars

The Morning Star and the Evening Star be triple candlestick stars you spot at the end of a trend cycle.

They're reversal game strong and can be ID'd through three dope traits.

Candlestick Patterns: Morning and Evening Star

Let’s break down the Evening Star Pattern on the right for a sneak peek at the visuals:

  1. The first candle is a bullish flame, riding high on that latest uptrend wave.
  2. The second candle got a tiny body, showing the market might be vibing in indecisiveness. This one can swing bullish or bearish, fam.
  3. The third candle's committing to that reversal life, as it closes beyond the middle of the starter candle.

Three White Soldiers and Black Crows

The Three White Soldiers pattern forms when three long bullish flames follow a DOWNTREND, showing a reversal's pulled up.

Candlestick Patterns: Three White Soldiers and Three Black Crows

This pattern's one of those all-up-in-your-business bullish flexes, especially when it pops after a long downtrend nap and a quick consolidation coffee break.

The first of the "three soldiers" rides in as the reversal pioneer. It ends that downtrend bold or lets you know consolidation time is done-zo.

For that Three White Soldiers pattern to count, the second candle gotta boss up bigger than the first candle’s body.

Altogether, the second candle should wrap up near its high, with a no-show or puny upper wick.

To wrap up that Three White Soldiers goodness, the last candle gotta match or beat the second one in size and have a short beep or zero shadow to boot.

The Three Black Crows candle pattern is just the Three White Soldiers’ shadow twin.

When three bearish flames pull up after a bloated UPTREND, it's saying a reversal’s cooking.

The second flame’s body gotta outsize the first and clinch at or hella near its low.

Finally, that third flame should either match or outdo the second flame with a tiny or ghosting lower shadow.

For the Three Black Crows pattern to stand official, the last candle’s gotta match or beat up the second in size and show little or no shadow.

Three Inside Up and Down

Candlestick Patterns: Three Inside Up and Three Inside Down
The Three Inside Up formation is a trend-reversal pattern chillin' at a DOWNTREND basement.

This lil' triple candlestick combo signals the end of downtrend moodiness, kickstarting a new upward wave.

For a legit three inside up candlestick arrangement, scope these traits:

  1. The first candle's found at a downtrend low, with a long bearish presence.
  2. The second candle needs to climb halfway up the first candle’s rise.
  3. The third rocket candle gotta seal above the first candle’s high to declare buyers have smashed that downtrend’s chill.

Likewise, the Three Inside Down vibe parks it at the top of an UPTREND breakout.

It’s like the uptrend's checked out, makin' that new downtrend entrance.

For a Three Inside Down standard, you gotta have:

  1. The starter candle's at an uptrend summit, flaunting a long bullish glow.
  2. The second candle journeys all the way down to the midpoint of candle numero uno.
  3. The third candle needs a power nap below the first candle’s low to show sellers finally snapped the uptrend’s ego.