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ThePistonDoctor

Underlying Theory Behind Candlestick Charting?

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Hello everyone!

 

I'm a fairly new trader working with the wonderful crew at Bulls on Wall Street (check them out at http://www.bullsonwallstreet.com if you've never heard of them, Kunal is a great guy!) and I am curious about the theory behind candlesticks patterns and why they work. I've read a couple of threads on this forum about the theory, but I haven't found quite the answer I'm looking for.

 

Let's take a hammer for example. Assume we are considering all the other parts of the market as well, i.e. perhaps the price is at the bottom of a downtrend on both the daily chart and a 5 minute chart, bouncing off a significant moving average or support level, and we see a useful amount of volume relative to the average. At the bottom, we see a hammer, then a reversal on the 5-minute chart into a significant and profitable uptrend. My question is this: We all know the pattern works in the right situation, but why? What is it about the shape of the hammer candlestick that signifies that selling has reached its end and buyers are now pouring in? I guess what I'm saying is, in a hammer, you know that the price over the period of that candle tried to go up a bit, then was dragged way down, but then came back up to close near but above the open price. Does that simply mean that at the low during that candle, there were a lot of buyers which brought the price back up? Is the rush of buyers at that low on the hammer the reason we assume that price has reached its bottom and that a reversal is imminent?

 

I'm just trying to understand more of the theory behind why these patterns work, and I think it is a good thing to understand rather than just blindly stabbing at a pattern (even if you're considering the other elements) because someone else told you it works. Also, is it possible that part of the reason these patterns work so consistently is that there are so many people that just blindly buy that idea, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy?

 

I'm really, really interested in understanding the underlying logic behind this, and I think it would yield a really good discussion. What are your ideas on this topic?

 

Thanks!!! :)

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  ThePistonDoctor said:

 

My question is this: We all know the pattern works in the right situation, but why? What is it about the shape of the hammer candlestick that signifies that selling has reached its end and buyers are now pouring in?

 

hindsight......there is nothing about the shape of the hammer that signifies selling has reached the end.

its only a visual representation of what has happened.

The trades must occur for the hammer to occur, it is not the hammer (or any other pattern magically occurring and making the market bottom. (Cart before horse analogy)

 

In regards something working in the right situation....The context you mentioned previously is more important, otherwise I am sure you will find plenty of hammers, nails, blowtorches and wizamajingets. :2c:

 

(plus FYI if the first thing you do is plug another site here you may have sealed your fate :))

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There is some great research out there that most candlestick patterns only work around 30% of the time. As SIUYA mentioned we can find the patterns in hindsight, but have you ever tried to trade based on the patterns?

 

I would argue that the patterns do not work consistently enough to generate overall profitable trades. Just remember that you can find a chart to prove any theory once, but can it be traded in foresight not only in hindsight. Just remember that when these "Guru's" write their books and publish their articles they only need one chart that looks good to prove their point, what about the other 500 times that it does not work?

 

Just some food for thought.

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"Candlestick Charting Explained" by Gregory Morris has a section where he discloses his research on the subject....in my opinion its useless but there you go...

 

My question is why don't you do your own research so that the result refects your target market and most recent data?

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  steve46 said:
"Candlestick Charting Explained" by Gregory Morris has a section where he discloses his research on the subject....in my opinion its useless but there you go...

 

My question is why don't you do your own research so that the result refects your target market and most recent data?

 

How do you know I haven't?

 

I don't see the problem in asking for references, the poster said he'd seen some research about these patterns. I'd like to look at it too if that's all right by you?

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  ThePistonDoctor said:
... At the bottom, we see a hammer, then a reversal on the 5-minute chart into a significant and profitable uptrend. My question is this: We all know the pattern works in the right situation, but why?....

 

As we know we can't use the same indicator (or variables) for different instruments, markets because they usually show different behavior. I use candlesticks because I think it summarizes the fight between the buyers and sellers. However I don't think 5-min chart is enough for this purpose. Candlestick formations can tell you what will come next but where they occur is important as well...

 

 

  T2CTrading said:
There is some great research out there that most candlestick patterns only work around 30% of the time....

There are lots of patterns and thousands of instruments. Besides some formations work better than others. Of course the time frame used in those researches would affect the results as well.

 

  SIUYA said:
FYI for anyone interested

http://thepatternsite.com/CandleEntry.html

 

he will likely have some info

 

I was going to link the same site :)

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Personally, I think candlestick patterns and formations are junk science, or voodoo theory... whatever!

 

Now now everyone, I know most of you probably use candles, so don't beat me up. When I started trading, there were no candles, I learned on bar charts.

 

Even today, if I had to start over, I would choose bar charts. I can read a bar easier than a candle, and with candles, they take up too much real estate screen space. I prefer to see much broader price history to gain a "feel" for the current trading environment. With candles, I just can't feel it.

 

My typical chart attached.

eurusd-4h.thumb.png.69bfce29cb70ea7c12bacc00773f34d4.png

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  ThePistonDoctor said:
I'm a fairly new trader working with the wonderful crew at Bulls on Wall Street

 

Hmm, first post on this forum and you're plugging a vendor. But I digress.

 

  ThePistonDoctor said:
What is it about the shape of the hammer candlestick that signifies that selling has reached its end and buyers are now pouring in?

 

That's just it -- it doesn't signify that at all. It only tells you that within a predefined time frame (say, from 10:00 to 10:15), that the market traded down, and then at 10:15 it is basically trading at the same price it was at 10:00. Now, you may attach some interpretation to it, that selling has reached its end, or that buying is pouring in, but that of course does not make it so. I will plug my thread I started called "The Close of a Bar is Meaningless" -- search TL for it if you'd like, where members discuss items related to opening and closing prices of intraday bars, and this certainly affects how you view your candlesticks.

 

  ThePistonDoctor said:
I'm just trying to understand more of the theory behind why these patterns work, and I think it is a good thing to understand rather than just blindly stabbing at a pattern (even if you're considering the other elements) because someone else told you it works.

 

This is a very good attitude to have -- question everything you hear, especially from someone selling something.

 

  ThePistonDoctor said:
Also, is it possible that part of the reason these patterns work so consistently is that there are so many people that just blindly buy that idea, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy?

 

I think so, absolutely.

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  RealDemo said:
How do you know I haven't?

 

I don't see the problem in asking for references, the poster said he'd seen some research about these patterns. I'd like to look at it too if that's all right by you?

 

The usual response is "yes I've done that"....

 

The defensive stance "how do you know....tells me what I wanted to know..thanks

 

and good luck

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  steve46 said:
The usual response is "yes I've done that"....

 

The defensive stance "how do you know....tells me what I wanted to know..thanks

 

and good luck

 

... lol wow how anal weird are you? .....the 'usual' response?

 

Sorry have I stuck a candlestick somewhere it won't shine?

 

I think what you need to know is that you're a presumptuous twit, good luck with that.

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I think the value in candlesticks comes from turning the data into a visual representation of traders sentiment which you can then assess at a glance. One thing to try are Heikin Ashi candlestick charts. With these charts you aren't concerned with the pattern of each candle, rather the direction of the trend because Heikin Ashi take into account the prior days bar with each new candle's open starting from the midpoint of the prior candle. Check it out, see if you like it.

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Holy cow, guys! I must say this is probably one of the most defensive forums I've ever posted on, and I post on a LOT of forums in all different subjects! After the first reply I actually wrote it off and just decided not to bother responding because I got slammed so quickly for posting a link to an external site, but after coming back and seeing two pages of people misinterpreting what I said I think I need to reply.

 

First of all, regarding Bulls on Wall Street I wasn't trying to plug them. I only mentioned the name because I have been following Kunal and some of the other members there on Twitter for months, tracking their progress, and they are great traders. Also I wanted to give people an idea of the type of trading I was doing and I thought providing a link to the site so you could check it out might give you a little more info on my style/background/habits. I have no connection with them and couldn't care less whether anyone here tries their services, it was just a friendly suggestion...lol

 

Whew, now that that's out of the way, let's get back to the original topic. I wasn't trying to turn this into a debate about whether candlestick indicators work or how often they work of whether candlesticks or bars or lines are better. What I wanted to understand is the THEORY.

 

  SIUYA said:
hindsight......there is nothing about the shape of the hammer that signifies selling has reached the end.

its only a visual representation of what has happened.

 

But don't you think that the pattern indicates something? For example at the bottom of a 4-5 day downtrend on a daily chart, if a green hammer forms, and the next day price gaps up and closes positive for the day, does that not signify that sellers have become outnumbered by buyers (that's why the price was pushed back up from the low the previous day and closed closed above the open, forming the hammer)? Of course it doesn't GUARANTEE reversal of the trend, but isn't it a good indication that the ratio of buyers to sellers has changed, and that we might want to start watching a 30min or 15 min chart for breakout opportunities?

 

  T2CTrading said:
There is some great research out there that most candlestick patterns only work around 30% of the time. As SIUYA mentioned we can find the patterns in hindsight, but have you ever tried to trade based on the patterns?

 

Yes, I just did yesterday actually, I'll show you at the bottom of this response.

 

  T2CTrading said:
I would argue that the patterns do not work consistently enough to generate overall profitable trades. Just remember that you can find a chart to prove any theory once, but can it be traded in foresight not only in hindsight. Just remember that when these "Guru's" write their books and publish their articles they only need one chart that looks good to prove their point, what about the other 500 times that it does not work?

 

Just some food for thought.

I'd agree that you cannot ONLY use these patterns, you need to combine them with many other aspects including what the market sentiment is, support and resistance, moving averages, news, political turmoil, earnings history, etc. All I'm looking for is information on why they work when they do. I don't buy that it is completely by chance that these things work, even if it's only 30% of the time. There has to be some underlying reason.

 

  steve46 said:
"Candlestick Charting Explained" by Gregory Morris has a section where he discloses his research on the subject....in my opinion its useless but there you go...

 

My question is why don't you do your own research so that the result refects your target market and most recent data?

 

Thanks for the reference even if it wasn't for me. I'll check that book out. You can never have too much information (as long as you know how to manage it all and weed out the useless stuff, lol)

 

  mitsubishi said:

You can talk about putting your candlestick in context,but why not just focus on context,and forget hindsight analysis?

 

Because I believe that hindsight analysis on the right timeframe proves that a certain type of behavior has occurred and can potentially give an indication of what will happen in the future based on that behavioral change.

 

  mitsubishi said:

The only indicators (if i would call them that) i want to use are leading indicators.

Such as?

 

 

  mitsubishi said:
If you want to see how many times a hammer fails drill down to low time frame charts.In other words a daily hammer on big volume could mean reversal,but what it really means is resting orders.Somebody big bought there (or maybe covered shorts) because that was the price they were willing to trade at.That is what i'm looking for,a price level i want to trade.How the price is represented on a chart can often be a sideshow..mesmerising for some.

Still,you can always stare at charts for a few thousand hours "until you get it" as the advice often goes.

You're right, I've seen it. Of course you will see all kinds of crazy patterns on 1min, 2 min and 5 min charts and they're usually meaningless, but it doesn't mean that the information provided by the patterns over a larger timescale isn't useful. I'll provide an example at the bottom.

 

  Obsidian said:
As we know we can't use the same indicator (or variables) for different instruments, markets because they usually show different behavior. I use candlesticks because I think it summarizes the fight between the buyers and sellers. However I don't think 5-min chart is enough for this purpose. Candlestick formations can tell you what will come next but where they occur is important as well...
Yes! Thank you, this is the kind of answer I was looking for. That was one of the reason I suspect that they work (sometimes): that they signify what is going on between the buyers and sellers. In the example of a hammer, it seems to indicate that the bears tried to push the price down further, but weren't able to keep it there because there were too many buyers propping the price back up. That, I think, is what forms the hammer which is why it would be important as an indicator on a daily or weekly chart, and could signify it might be time to start looking for intraday setups to enter into a position.

 

  smmatrix said:
Personally, I think candlestick patterns and formations are junk science, or voodoo theory... whatever!

 

Now now everyone, I know most of you probably use candles, so don't beat me up. When I started trading, there were no candles, I learned on bar charts.

 

Even today, if I had to start over, I would choose bar charts. I can read a bar easier than a candle, and with candles, they take up too much real estate screen space. I prefer to see much broader price history to gain a "feel" for the current trading environment. With candles, I just can't feel it.

 

My typical chart attached.

 

I think that's just personal preference. I personally like candles better because the bars seem so convoluted and provide the exact same information. I find candlesticks easier to read. Besides after all, if you drew a rectangle connecting the opening and closing ticks of a bar and filled it in, you'd have a candle...:)

 

  joshdance said:
Hmm, first post on this forum and you're plugging a vendor. But I digress.
Sorry, there will be no more of that. Already explained at the top.

 

 

 

  joshdance said:
That's just it -- it doesn't signify that at all. It only tells you that within a predefined time frame (say, from 10:00 to 10:15), that the market traded down, and then at 10:15 it is basically trading at the same price it was at 10:00. Now, you may attach some interpretation to it, that selling has reached its end, or that buying is pouring in, but that of course does not make it so. I will plug my thread I started called "The Close of a Bar is Meaningless" -- search TL for it if you'd like, where members discuss items related to opening and closing prices of intraday bars, and this certainly affects how you view your candlesticks.
See, I disagree. I think it shows you exactly that. That there was a specific relationship between the number of buyers and sellers during that particular time period and that's the reason the candle formed in the way it did. Interesting you also agreed about the self-fulfilling prophecy bit. I'm sure a lot of technical analysis is really just a self-fulfilling prophecy because there are so many technical analysts.

 

  TimRacette said:
I think the value in candlesticks comes from turning the data into a visual representation of traders sentiment which you can then assess at a glance. One thing to try are Heikin Ashi candlestick charts. With these charts you aren't concerned with the pattern of each candle, rather the direction of the trend because Heikin Ashi take into account the prior days bar with each new candle's open starting from the midpoint of the prior candle. Check it out, see if you like it.
Another point for the "it represents the relationship between buyers and sellers" team I guess. Thanks for your response and that suggestion. I will check out Heikin Ashi candlestick charts!

 

---------------------

 

Ok now after a long post, here's an example of me using a hammer:

 

This is MHR. I noticed that on 3/7 the chart had formed a hammer on reduced volume from the days before (circled in yellow). That triggered me to watch for a breakout spot on 3/8 if the price started rising. Sure enough on 3/8 the price opened higher and so I went to a 5min chart and watched for breakout opportunities. I actually attempted to enter this trade at $6.35 because that was the break of 3/6's low, but I couldn't get filled there. I waited for the chart to stabilize again and then entered just before 1pm at the breakout of the $6.43 level. I sold some of my position this morning for a small gain at $6.73 and am still holding the rest. So I guess all I'm saying is it seemed to work this time, and I don't buy that it was just due to chance. I have done this many times in the past with this pattern and am almost always successful. BTW when I said I am a fairly new trader I meant a fairly new daytrader. I have been swingtrading for years. :) Anyway, here are the charts (as attachments so they're not gigantic in the post), sorry for the looooooooooooong post!

5aa710d8261a3_Picture7.thumb.png.d2c7d7ee524422d5f29dcf900333b88f.png

5aa710d8319ba_Picture8.thumb.png.d9df3abd65590e3306e0cee0108a985d.png

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  ThePistonDoctor said:
This is MHR. I noticed that on 3/7 the chart had formed a hammer on reduced volume

 

You have the wrong volume circled. The hammer was on increased volume (one to the left of what you circled), much more bullish. The last candle on your chart is hard to see but the volumes are even color coded--goes to show even a mistake can lead to good results! :D

 

I do not view intraday candle patterns as significant; however, on the DAILY time frame I think what you have given an example of here is significant. Again, I see the structure of a day's OHLC as more meaningful than that of intraday, for reasons I have explained elsewhere. Nice job on the trade.

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  joshdance said:
I do not view intraday candle patterns as significant;

 

I agree but let us say they are much more insignificant than the already insignificant ones found in daily data.

 

I think what those patterns mean depends on context. Theat can be very subjective. Also as mentioned in another thread candle formations are a small subset of price pattern formations. If you are going to use such methods better to use the expanded set. In this blog you will find many examples of such patterns. The author shows how slight variations in the pattern description/formulation produce very different results. For the 4 candles in SPY he gets 12 variants. As you see there are many stories told at once, not only one.

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Piston Doctor - no problems with the reference to other vendors.....but on of the nice things about TL is the vigilance attached to some spamming references - especially in first posts thats all.

 

Regards candles - they represent nothing more than what has happened. If you assign more than that then you will unfortunately create issues. As others have mentioned the context is more important....and as food for though.....why have the MAs on the chart if they do have significance.

Plus, how many other candle patterns dont work without the context.....ie; its the underlying movement that they represent as opposed to the candle causing the underlying movement -( I dont believe too much in the self fullfilling claims in liquid markets.)

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  ThePistonDoctor said:
...So I guess all I'm saying is it seemed to work this time, and I don't buy that it was just due to chance. I have done this many times in the past with this pattern and am almost always successful...

 

It seems like you've said that you've backtested your "hammer patterns" and when you've applied such in real-trading that you're consistently profitable via your "hammer patterns" via your statement that they are "almost always successful".

 

My question to you is via the above observation, why do you care about the theory of hammer patterns because it would obviously seem to me that someone that is consistently profitable while using a trade method would already know the theory behind the pattern...sometimes refer to as the psychology of the pattern or the supply/demand theory of the pattern.

 

By the way, I'm not bashing "hammer patterns"...I too use them consistently profitable but I don't use them alone. Thus, the "market context" in which I apply the pattern is in my opinion more important than the trade signal itself. Simply, the "market context" tells you the direction of the price action and gives you that critical understanding of the price action whereas the trade signal (e.g. hammer pattern) gives the signal to enter the direction of the price action.

 

Also, one of your charts does not represent a "hammer pattern" (circled in yellow) @ http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/attachments/104/27817d1331257230-underlying-theory-behind-candlestick-charting-picture-7.png

 

Regardless to your incorrect identification of hammer patterns, it would then seem that you have a good understanding market context and/or not trading hammer patterns by themselves to be consistently profitable even while incorrectly identifying candlestick patterns.

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wrbtrader, I guess if you want to be nitpicky it's more of a morning star (even though they are both bullish and represent mostly the same market sentiment), To be fair, you can do a Google Image search for "morning star candlestick" or "hammer candlestick" or any other pattern and find 100 different interpretations of what they should look like, but I digress. What's important IMO is that the person using them understands what they represent. Anyway, I suppose joshdance is right on the volume issue...my bad :-P. It was late at night and at the end of a very long post when I circled that. Regardless of all that, it seems I've got my answer to the original question.

 

I was just asking in general why people think candlestick patterns work (when they do). I think you're all right that, in general, the reason they are somewhat reliable is that they prove the psychology of the market is changing in some way. However, maybe the reason they are unreliable as some of you have said is that they are not used correctly by many of the people who use them. Or maybe they just simply are not reliable indicators.

 

Personally I don't buy into them too much, I tend to trade more support/resistance breakouts and press releases/earnings, but I do find them useful when looking for the end of a trend for swing trades. For daytrading, I hardly touch candlestick patterns and rely almost entirely on support, resistance and volume as well as matching breakouts on multiple timeframes. A couple more examples of swings I've traded recently are CIEN (short on 2/24 after a shooting star) and SZYM on 3/7 after a hammer on 3/5 and then a might tighter trading range on 3/6 and 3/7 (you can check out the charts on any charting site :))

 

Thanks for the link to priceactionlab.com. I checked it out and yeah, multiple candle patterns can definitely be more telling than a single candle. When I trade a hammer or a doji or anything at the top of bottom of a trend, I ALWAYS wait another candle or two before entering a trade because I don't believe that a single candle can tell you anything without being put into the context of what's around it!

 

For what it's worth, I sold the rest of my MHR on Friday at $6.92 for a 7.6% gain and may be buying back in on Monday if it breaks the 20dma and can built support there! :-P

 

Thanks for your responses everyone.

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Bars in combination. Patterns that repeat. Order flow. These are the essence of candle charting. I used them for years in combination with observed strong uptrends or downtrends getting in and out on reversals. Sometimes they work, sometimes not. Double and triple tops they identify great. Double bottoms also, but triple bottoms not so much. I currently have taken to combining candle patterns with cumulative order flow and the results have been excellent. I would say that the candle patterns represent order flow/fill patterns and that is the theory behind them. When you see cumulative order flow along side a candle pattern you don't question the relevance anymore. They are tradable and for my trading, very relevant

 

Cheers.

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At the same time, they left the door open for renewed trade talks, though no specific timeline has been set.   US Stock Futures Plunge Ahead of Monday Open   US stock futures pointed to another brutal day on Wall Street. Futures tied to the S&P 500 dropped over 3%, Nasdaq futures sank 4%, and Dow Jones futures lost 2.5%—equivalent to nearly 1,000 points. The Nasdaq Composite officially entered a bear market on Friday, down more than 20% from its recent highs, while the S&P 500 is nearing bear territory. The Dow closed last week in correction. Oil prices followed suit, with WTI crude dropping over 4% to $59.49 per barrel—its lowest since April 2021.   Wall Street closed last week in disarray, erasing more than $5 trillion in value amid fears of an all-out trade war. The Nasdaq Composite officially entered a bear market on Friday, sinking more than 20% from its recent peak. The S&P 500 is approaching bear territory, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has slipped firmly into correction territory.   German Banks Hit Hard Amid Escalating Trade Tensions   German banking stocks were among the worst hit in Europe. Shares of Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank plunged between 9.5% and 10.3% during early Frankfurt trading, compounding Friday’s steep losses. Fears over a global trade war and looming recession are severely impacting the financial sector, particularly export-driven economies like Germany.   Eurozone Growth at Risk   Eurozone officials are bracing for economic fallout, with Greek central bank governor Yannis Stournaras warning that Trump’s tariff policy could reduce eurozone GDP by up to 1%. The EU is preparing retaliatory tariffs on $28 billion worth of American goods—ranging from steel and aluminium to consumer products like dental floss and luxury jewellery.   Starting Wednesday, the US is expected to impose 25% tariffs on key EU exports, with Brussels ready to respond with its own 20% levies on nearly all remaining American imports.   UK Faces £22 Billion Economic Blow   In the UK, fresh research from KPMG revealed that the British economy could shrink by £21.6 billion by 2027 due to US-imposed tariffs. The analysis points to a 0.8% dip in economic output over the next two years, undermining Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ growth agenda. The report also warned of additional fiscal pressure that may lead to future tax increases and public spending cuts.   Wall Street Braces for Recession   Goldman Sachs revised its US recession probability to 45% within the next year, citing tighter financial conditions and rising policy uncertainty. This marks a sharp jump from the 35% risk estimated just last month—and more than double January’s 20% projection. J.P. Morgan issued a bleaker outlook, now forecasting a 60% chance of recession both in the US and globally.   Global Leaders Respond as Trade Tensions Deepen   The dramatic market sell-off was triggered by China’s sweeping retaliation to a new round of US tariffs, which included a 34% levy on all American imports. Beijing’s state-run People’s Daily released a defiant statement, asserting that China has the tools and resilience to withstand economic pressure from Washington. ‘We’ve built up experience after years of trade conflict and are prepared with a full arsenal of countermeasures,’ it stated.   Around the world, policymakers are responding to the growing threat of a trade-led economic slowdown. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced plans to appeal directly to Washington and push for tariff relief, following the US administration’s decision to impose a blanket 24% tariff on Japanese imports. He aims to visit the US soon to present Japan’s case as a fair trade partner.   In Taiwan, President Lai Ching-te said his administration would work closely with Washington to remove trade barriers and increase purchases of American goods in an effort to reduce the bilateral trade deficit. The island's defence ministry has also submitted a new list of US military procurements to highlight its strategic partnership.   Economists and strategists are warning of deeper economic consequences. Ronald Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard, said the scale and speed of these tariffs could result in far more severe damage than previously anticipated. ‘This isn’t just a bilateral conflict anymore — more countries are likely to respond in the coming weeks,’ he noted.   Analysts at Barclays cautioned that smaller Asian economies, such as Singapore and South Korea, may face challenges in negotiating with Washington and are already adjusting their economic growth forecasts downward in response to the unfolding trade crisis.           Oil Prices Sink on Demand Concerns   Crude oil continued its sharp slide on Monday, driven by recession fears and weakened global demand. Brent fell 3.9% to $63.04 a barrel, while WTI plunged over 4% to $59.49—both benchmarks marking weekly losses exceeding 10%. Analysts say inflationary pressures and slowing economic activity may drag demand down, even though energy imports were excluded from the latest round of tariffs.   Vandana Hari of Vanda Insights noted, ‘The market is struggling to find a bottom. Until there’s a clear signal from Trump that calms recession fears, crude prices will remain under pressure.’   OPEC+ Adds Further Pressure with Output Hike   Bearish sentiment intensified after OPEC+ announced it would boost production by 411,000 barrels per day in May, far surpassing the expected 135,000 bpd. The alliance called on overproducing nations to submit compensation plans by April 15. Analysts fear this surprise move could undo years of supply discipline and weigh further on already fragile oil markets.   Global political risks also flared over the weekend. Iran rejected US proposals for direct nuclear negotiations and warned of potential military action. Meanwhile, Russia claimed fresh territorial gains in Ukraine’s Sumy region and ramped up attacks on surrounding areas—further darkening the outlook for markets.   Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Andria Pichidi HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
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