Falling wedge statistics
- In 82% of cases, the exit is bullish.
- In 55% of cases, a falling wedge is a reversal pattern.
- In 63% of cases, the pattern’s price objective is achieved when the resistance line is broken.
- In 53% of cases, the price makes a support pullback on the falling wedge’s resistance line.
- In 27% of cases, false breaks (false exits) appear.
Notes on falling wedges
- The contact points on the falling lines must be significant because otherwise it might be a flag.
- The steeper the falling wedge’s trend lines (falling strongly), the more severe the upward movement is at the breakout (exit from the chart pattern).
- False breaks (or false exits) give an indication of the direction of exit. If a false bullish break occurs, the exit will be downwards in only 3% of cases. Exploiting a false bullish break is therefore statistically low risk.
- Retracements are generally twice as fast as the falling wedge was in its formation
- Pullbacks are detrimental to the pattern’s performance.
- The break out point (exit) generally occurs at 60% of the length of the falling wedge.
- Very wide falling wedges give better performance than narrow falling wedges.
For your information: A falling wedge is a reversal chart pattern. Its opposite is a rising wedge.
IGNORE THE SCAM WICK AS THOS HAPPEN WITH AMM POOLS QUITE OFFTEN.