Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns. Thomas N. Bulkowski

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boundary. Go long at the bottom (which hopes for an upward breakout), but be sure to use stops. Partial decline Short a stock if you see a partial decline once price curls around and begins heading back up. A partial decline correctly predicts an upward breakout 75% of the time. Busted trade If you see a busted downward breakout, then consider buying the stock. See Table 10.9 for details.
Description Up Breakout Down Breakout
Percentage reaching half height target 82% 76%
Percentage reaching full height target 65% 51%
Percentage reaching 2× height 49% 23%
Percentage reaching 3× height 38% 13%

      Wait for breakout. Because the breakout direction isn't known until price closes outside one of the trendline boundaries, don't try to anticipate the breakout direction. Price may reverse at the trendline, handing you a loss.

      Stops location. Let's say price breaks out upward. Compute the target price and make a profit‐and‐loss assessment of the potential trade. What is the likely downward move compared with the target price? Does the potential profit justify the risk of the trade? For Figure 10.7, there is support in the 46‐to‐47 area.

      Let's say the stop price you select is at 45.75, just below the bottom of the support area. If the breakout price is 50.50 (which is the close the day after the upward breakout), that gives a potential loss of less than 10%. With a target price of 55.50, or 10% upside, the win/loss ratio is an unexciting one‐to‐one. In such a situation, you could either tighten your stop by moving it higher (and risk getting taken out by normal price action) or look elsewhere for a more profitable trade.

      Remember there is no rule that says you have to place a trade. Let me also say that I'm not a fan of win/loss ratios. If you trade patterns well, the profit should come.

      Intraformation trading. If the broadening pattern is tall enough, go long after price rebounds off the lower trendline and hope for an immediate upward breakout. Only try this if you're an experienced swing trader and only after the pattern passes all of the identification guidelines.

      Partial decline. A partial rise correctly predicts a downward breakout 47% of the time. However, a partial decline correctly predicts an upward breakout 75% of the time. So if you can tell when a partial decline is in place, meaning the broadening pattern is fully formed (see “Partial decline” in the Glossary for details), then consider buying the stock and hoping for an upward breakout. The partial decline might be a pause that happens as price moves to the lower trendline, so if price breaks out downward, then close out the position. Otherwise hold onto the trade and hope price starts to head back up.

      Busted trade. With a 60% average rise after a single busted downward breakout, busted patterns might be the way to profit from this chart pattern. See Table 10.9 for details.

      I have traded this chart pattern a number of times. Let me tell you about what I found in my trade review.

      Cisco Systems

      Let's start with three trades in Cisco Systems. All of them traded the same broadening pattern that formed in June to September 2000.

      I bought the stock after it broke out of a small congestion area (it was a small downward trending pennant with an upward breakout buried within the broadening pattern). I expected the stock to break out upward from the broadening pattern. Instead, it touched the top trendline and headed lower. As a swing trade, it would have been good to sell then, but I didn't. I rode the stock lower and sold after a downward breakout.

      The second trade was also within the same pattern, but I bought as price dropped before breaking out downward. This was a “hip shot,” a trade I just glance at and make, confident that it'll work. Each time I pen those words in my trading notebook, I know the trade is going to be a loser (that's what I learned over the years, perhaps well after this trade). Hip shots just don't work for me. Now, I take my time to analyze the situation before trading.

      Anyway, I thought the stock was going to turn, but it didn't. It kept going down.

      With the third trade, I bought at the lower trendline, expecting an upward bounce. Instead, it closed the day outside the pattern's boundary, breaking out downward from the pattern. The next day, I closed out all three trades and took a loss of 15%, 8%, and 4% on them, respectively.

      My notebook tells what I learned.

       Lesson: If an upside breakout from partial decline does not appear immediately, sell.

       Lesson: Do not buy more of a stock as it moves downward across the broadening pattern. Wait for it to bounce off the bottom trendline. Otherwise, the breakout could be downward, resulting in multiple losing trades.

       Lesson: Close out the trade when the market tells you you're wrong.

      National Fuel Gas

      National Fuel Gas (NFG) in late 2004 formed a broadening pattern. This pattern broke out upward, and I bought the next day, the same day the stock closed back inside the pattern (I didn't know it at the time).

      On 18 April, I have this curious entry: “I removed the stop intraday as I was getting used to my broker. The stock dipped below the stop price, but I didn't

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