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Not long ago, I was analyzing technical patterns and came across something that many traders underestimate: the ascending wedge. It’s one of those patterns that can be brutally effective if you know how to read it.
For those who don’t know, an ascending wedge forms when the price rises but the trend lines converge. Basically, the market is rising but by smaller and smaller amounts, as if it’s running out of fuel. The upper and lower lines both have an upward slope, but they’re narrowing. That’s what makes this such an interesting pattern: it shows you exactly when the impulse is about to end.
What’s curious is that this pattern works both as a reversal in bullish trends and to confirm bearish continuations. It depends on where you find it. If it’s at the end of a strong rally, it’s probably the moment when the market will change direction. But if you see it within a bearish trend, it’s more like a pause before it keeps falling.
Now, volume is your best ally here. When you see a well-formed ascending wedge, volume should gradually decrease. That confirms that the momentum is weakening. And when it finally breaks below the lower support line, you should see a spike in volume. Without that volume on the break, it’s very likely a false signal.
The way to trade this is fairly straightforward. First, you wait for the pattern to form correctly, with those two highs and two higher lows each time. Then you monitor the breakout. When the price closes below the support line, that’s your entry signal for a short position. But here comes the important part: don’t enter too early. Many traders try to get ahead and end up burning themselves with false signals.
For the stop loss, the logical place is just above the last high or above the upper trend line. This limits your risk if the breakout doesn’t work. And for the target, you measure the height of the wedge at the start of the pattern and project that distance downward from where it breaks.
There’s something else that also works well: after the breakout, the price sometimes goes back to touch the support line (which now acts as resistance). If you see the price respecting that resistance on the retest, that’s another opportunity to enter or increase your position.
The indicators I recommend using along with the ascending wedge are the RSI to detect bearish divergences, the MACD to confirm bearish crossovers, and obviously volume. If the price is below key moving averages like the EMA 50, that also helps confirm the bearish sentiment.
What I’ve seen many people get wrong is entering too early, ignoring volume, or not using a stop loss. There’s also the mistake of forcing patterns where they don’t exist. Not every converging line is a valid ascending wedge. It has to meet the criteria: higher highs and higher lows, clear converging lines, decreasing volume.
In my experience, this pattern is quite reliable when you identify it correctly and wait for confirmation. Patience is the key. You don’t need to enter every wedge you see, but when you spot a well-formed one with all the elements in place, the odds are in your favor. Discipline in entry, risk management with the stop loss, and clear targets based on measuring the pattern—those are what make the difference between a winning trade and a losing one.