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a rising wedge

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OANDA:GBPUSD   British Pound / U.S. Dollar
A rising wedge is a pattern that forms on a fluctuating chart and is caused by a narrowing amplitude. If you draw lines along with the highs and lows, then the two lines will form an imaginary angle that will narrow over time. Moreover, this angle’s inclination must be positive; the resulting corner should be pointing upward, indicating an uptrend.

A rising wedge is a bearish reversal pattern. Typically, a rising wedge reverses an uptrend, but there are exceptions. It sometimes happens that the rising wedge continues the trend. If there was a downtrend before the rising wedge, then the price goes down after the wedge, and it turns out that the rising wedge continues the trend. But it is important to remember that in any case, after the rising wedge, there is a price decline.
The rising wedge is not a very common pattern and is not very easy to spot. Even though bulls and bears appear to be in relative equilibrium, the narrowing of the rising wedge corridor suggests that supply is winning. In the end, buyers break down, and sellers take control of the market. To determine how the price will behave further, it is necessary to further analyze this instrument.
Trading Advantages for Wedge Patterns
As a general rule, price pattern strategies for trading systems rarely yield returns that outperform buy-and-hold strategies over time, but some patterns do appear to be useful in forecasting general price trends nonetheless. Some studies suggest that a wedge pattern will breakout towards a reversal (a bullish breakout for falling wedges and a bearish breakout for rising wedges) more often than two-thirds of the time, with a falling wedge being a more reliable indicator than a rising wedge.

Because wedge patterns converge to a smaller price channel, the distance between the price on entry of the trade and the price for a stop loss, is relatively smaller than the start of the pattern. This means that a stop loss can be placed close by at the time the trade begins, and if the trade is successful, the outcome can yield a greater return than the amount risked on the trade to begin with.
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