A symmetrical triangle chart pattern is a period of consolidation before the price is forced to break out or down. A breakdown from the lower trend line marks the start of a new bearish trend, while a breakout from the upper trend line indicates the beginning of a new bullish trend.
The price target for a breakout or breakdown from a symmetrical triangle is equal to the distance from the high and low of the earliest part of the pattern applied to the breakout price point. For example, a symmetrical triangle pattern might start at a low of $10 and increase to $15 before the price range narrows over time. A breakout from $12 would imply a price target of $17 ($15 minus $10 equals $5, then plus $12 equals $17).
The stop-loss for the symmetrical triangle pattern is often put right below the breakout point. For example, if the security breaks out from $12 with high trading volume, traders will frequently place a stop-loss just below $12.
Symmetrical triangles differ from ascending and descending triangles in that the upper and lower trend lines slope toward a center point. In contrast, ascending triangles have a horizontal upper trend line, predicting a potential breakout higher, and descending triangles have a horizontal lower trend line, predicting a potential breakdown lower.
prior movement.
免責聲明
這些資訊和出版物並不意味著也不構成TradingView提供或認可的金融、投資、交易或其他類型的意見或建議。請在
使用條款閱讀更多資訊。