Tweezer Bottom Candlestick Patterns Explained: What They Are & How To Trade Them

Playing Markets

Tweezer bottom patterns are one of the most well-known candlestick patterns because they are easily identified and give a clear signal.

Since candlesticks are the basic building block of most technical analysis, the ability to recognize different candlestick patterns is a crucial trading skill.

First though, let’s start with a definition.

In this Guide to Tweezer Bottom Patterns, we’ll explain:

 

What Is a Tweezer Bottom Pattern?

A tweezer bottom pattern is a 2-candlestick formation that may signal a bullish reversal.  It may appear during a downtrend and is made up of a large bearish candlestick followed by a large bullish candlestick where the bottom of the bodies and wicks of each candle match each other.

 

Tweezer Bottom Pattern Diagram - A Japanese candlestick pattern that includes two candlesticks: 1) a long bearish candlestick with a lower wick and 2) a long bullish candlestick of similar length with a similar sized lower wick. It illustrates that price decreased significantly during the first time period then retested the first period's low during the second time period before increasing significantly.It is a subtype of the tweezers pattern and the opposite of the tweezer top.  For this pattern type, the length of the trend-side wicks form a price band that acts as a make-or-break range for future price action.

Of course, no candlestick pattern guarantees a particular outcome.  Instead, they offer clues as to what is going on in the market.

So the question is, what does a tweezer pattern really tell you?

What Tweezer Bottom Patterns Mean

Like many candlestick patterns, the name itself doesn’t reveal much.

And unlike some, English speakers do not use the Japanese name for it.  The term “tweezer” comes from the fact that it looks like a pair of tweezers.  This is helpful only in the fact that it is easy to remember.

In trading terms:

  • During the first period, price continued the pre-existing downtrend before pulling back above the low.
  • During the second period, price moved back down until it reached the prior period’s low then rose back up near the open of the first period.

This sets the stage for bullish reversal, as it appears countertrend pressure is ready to take full control.

How To Recognize Tweezer Bottom Candlestick Patterns

Traders are attracted to patterns partly because they are easy to spot.

However, it’s also easy to see things on the charts that aren’t truly there (or anticipate events that never come to fruition).  That’s one of the reasons why waiting for confirmation is so important.

Technically, a tweezer bottom pattern must:

  • Appear during a downtrend
  • Begin with a bearish long candle that has an lower wick, such as a bearish belt hold
  • End with a bullish long candle that has an lower wick of approximately the same length as the first

In practicality though, many traders will make various exceptions.

  • The second candle doesn’t necessarily have to be a long candle, as long as the wicks of both candles are even.
  • The wicks of the two candles don’t necessarily have to match exactly, as long as both candles are long candles in which the open of the second matches the close of the first.
  • The candles don’t necessarily have to have wicks, as long as the candle bodies are nearly identical in size.

Depending on who you ask, any of these standards may be more or less important.  Moreover, some of these variations may be more properly classified as other reversal candlestick patterns.

Remember, identifying the reversal itself is more important than labeling the formation.  That’s not to say these standards are completely unimportant (as we’ll touch on shortly).  It’s just to say that the implications are more important than the criteria.

In other words, you need to put it into context.

Where Tweezer Bottoms Fit in the Chart Narrative

The markets are often characterized as a battle between the bulls and the bears.

Tweezer bottom patterns show that the bears attempted to press their advantage on candle one but surrendered the momentum over the course of candle two.

On the chart, it looks like an about-face.

It might happen like this on a daily time frame:

On the first day, price surged downwards as the bears maintained the status quo.  Before the close, price pulled back slightly but not enough to warrant much concern.  At the beginning of the first day, it seemed like the market was in for more of the same as price began to fall.  However, the move stalled out upon reaching the previous day’s low.  Sensing weakness, the bulls made their move, pushing price all the way back up to the open of the day before.

From here, buyers know they need to defend this level to have a chance at changing the trend.

In the short-term, it amounts to a price action 180.

The question traders need to ask themselves is, “Is this the mark of a sea change or simply a routine correction?”

To answer that question, you’ll need more than just an understanding of Japanese candlesticks and candlestick patterns.  You’ll want to analyze both within the context of greater chart patterns as well as trend and price levels.  You’ll also want to make use of your own chart markup and indicators.

Analyze the history of your preferred asset(s) with respect to tweezer patterns and apply it to your own trading style.

Now, you can test (and/or stretch) the criteria we mentioned above to find the most tradeable opportunities.  For example, you may find that tweezer bottoms perform more reliably when their lower wicks are larger.  Or, you may find something else entirely.

Here is where the story in the charts begins to come into focus.

This is what we call technical analysis.

How To Trade Tweezer Bottom Patterns

Bullish reversal points are great places to enter longs or exit shorts.

Tweezer bottoms serve as easy-to-spot signs of potential bullish reversals—and may even lead to longer-term bottoms when found on higher time frames.

Generally, you can put more weight into multi-stick patterns than single candles.  They give you more information over a longer amount of time.  Still, it is considered unwise to trade based on candlestick patterns alone.  They rarely have extremely high hit rates by themselves.

You need additional points of confluence to shift the probabilities in your favor.

Some of the more important ones include:

  • Volume – Reversals are often accompanied by elevated trading volume.  For tweezers, be on the lookout for it on both, but especially the second candle (or shortly thereafter).
  • Price Formations – Tweezer bottoms that form near important support levels are usually more likely to lead to sustained reversals.  They may also reinforce the strength of such levels.
  • Oscillator Shift – Oscillating indicators like the RSI or stochastics are commonly used to identify reversals by analyzing slope, percentile, and/or divergence.

The fewer such factors corroborating the reversal, the less confident you can be about it.

It would be difficult to form a comprehensive trading strategy around tweezer patterns (whether bullish or bearish).  There simply isn’t enough there to develop a strong edge.  Even with a great understanding of trading math, orders, psychology, risk management, options, and automation, you’d still have a hard time.

You’re much better off building your strategy around other tools then using reversal patterns as an additional point of confirmation.

Patterns like the tweezer are much better idea givers than trade makers.

Other Candlestick Pattern Types

The tweezer bottom is but one of many candlestick patterns.

You’d be wise to get familiar with all of the other ones too.

Sure, there are quite a few of them.  But don’t let that intimidate you.

It’s unnecessary to memorize all the names and criteria for every pattern.  What’s more important is to learn the principles of price action and technical analysis.

In fact, you’re free to forget all of the names and specifications as long as you can look at a group of candlesticks and understand what they are trying to tell you.

Takeaways

To review:

Tweezer bottoms are a type of candlestick pattern that signals a potential bullish reversal.  While not a guarantee, their appearance may indicate that market conditions are changing.  Thus, they can help you find winning trades.

Of course, there are other candlestick patterns that you should learn about.  And even so, the ability to recognize patterns is not enough to trade successfully on its own.

Nonetheless, you’ve now added one more tool to your toolkit.

Have questions or more information to add?  Contribute to the conversation in the comments below!  Or, if you know someone who could benefit from this post, share it with them.  You can also check out our Candlestick Patterns Guide to improve your candlestick analysis skills.