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I've noticed that many beginner traders overlook one of the most powerful tools of technical analysis — triangles in trading. These are not just beautiful geometric shapes on the chart but real signals that indicate where the price might go. Let’s understand what happens with each type.
First, about descending triangles. This is a bearish pattern that forms when a line appears from above, constantly lowering its peaks, while a horizontal support level holds below. I've seen this many times — the price jumps up but can't break above the previous level each time. Sellers become more aggressive with each attempt. When the support finally breaks, that's when it begins. The main rule: enter a short position only when volume confirms the breakout; otherwise, you risk catching a false signal. I place a stop-loss above the last resistance.
Ascending triangles are the opposite. Here, the support line rises, while resistance remains in place at the top. This is a bullish signal, often appearing in the middle of an uptrend. You can see buyers becoming more aggressive, each time raising the bottom higher. When the price breaks the upper resistance with increasing volume, it’s a good moment to go long. These triangles work especially well in trading when the market is already in an uptrend.
Symmetrical triangles are a neutral zone. Both lines converge toward the center: the upper line descends, the lower line ascends. The price compresses, volume decreases. This is consolidation, and sooner or later, a breakout will occur. Not sure which way? Wait for confirmation. If the price breaks upward — buy; if downward — sell. The main thing is not to enter before a clear breakout, or you might get trapped.
Then there are expanding triangles — a completely different beast. Here, lines diverge, volatility increases, and it often signals chaos. When you see such a pattern, be cautious. You can enter, but with a smaller position size and a tighter stop-loss. Usually, this appears before major news or in very volatile markets.
Now, practical tips that help. Volume is king. A breakout with increasing volume is much more reliable than one on low volume. Second — look at the previous trend. If triangles form within a clear movement, patterns tend to work more accurately. Third — always use a stop-loss. I’ve seen people lose deposits because they didn’t protect their positions.
Personally, I use these patterns as part of a comprehensive strategy. Triangles give direction, but I confirm signals with other indicators. On Gate, you can conveniently track movements of cryptocurrencies like SUI, BONK, and FLOKI across different timeframes — these formations are clearly visible there. The main thing is not to fixate on one pattern but to look at the overall market picture. The more signals align, the higher the probability of success.