Education: Bear Flag Pattern



A detailed explanation of the perfect strategy for trading in a declining market. The bear flag pattern is a very solid structure that indicates the continuation of a downtrend. During market crashes, seize the opportunity to earn substantial profits.

What it looks like on the chart:
1. Flagpole: A sharp decline. The main force pushes the price down with huge trading volume. The market is in panic.
2. Flag itself: A consolidation zone. The price slowly and hesitantly climbs within a narrow upward channel. During this stage, trading volume drops to its lowest point.

What’s the logic?
After a sharp drop, the chart is just taking a temporary breather. Retail traders start to buy the dip excitedly, hoping for a market reversal. Meanwhile, smart money is quietly distributing chips to them, buying back shorts at better prices, preparing for the next plunge. The trap is then closed.

How to operate correctly?
- Entry point: Enter strictly when the price breaks below the lower boundary of the flag. Preferably wait for a volume-increasing red candlestick to close below.
- Stop-loss point: Must be placed above the highest point inside the flag pattern to prevent being swept out by market makers’ false moves.
- Take-profit point: Measure the height of the initial decline (the flagpole), then project downward from the breakout point. That will be our final target.

Core rules:
Do not open short positions inside the flag pattern. Be patient and wait for a volume breakout below the lower boundary, then enter decisively.

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