
Golden Hammer
A golden hammer is excessive dependence on a specific tool to perform many different functions. The golden hammer principle is also known as the law of the instrument or Maslow's hammer. While the golden hammer term mainly applies to education, research, and scientific fields, it can also relate to an overdependence on a tried-and-true business strategy or investment approach. The golden hammer should not be confused with a hammer in the field of technical analysis, a discipline that involves the study of past price charts to predict future prices. While it works like a regular hammer to smash obstacles that might kill the player’s on-screen character, the golden hammer is more powerful and can allow the character to float in midair. A hammer pattern can also coincide with so-called golden ratios, also known as the Fibonacci retracement levels of roughly 161.8%, or more commonly, its inverse, 61.8%.

What Is a Golden Hammer?
A golden hammer is excessive dependence on a specific tool to perform many different functions. In investing it is when a trader depends on one particular analysis tool or viewpoint to make all decisions.
Golden hammers also happen in the business world when a company uses a single demographic or analytic to make strategic decisions. As they say, when you give a corporation’s management team a hammer, then everything around them appears to be a nail.
The golden hammer principle is also known as the law of the instrument or Maslow's hammer.


Understanding a Golden Hammer
While the golden hammer term mainly applies to education, research, and scientific fields, it can also relate to an overdependence on a tried-and-true business strategy or investment approach. Using a golden hammer may reflect a bias toward the familiar. It also may be seen as a solution without refinement. The golden hammer may work, although a less drastic approach may be more appropriate.
Technical Analysis and Golden Hammers
The golden hammer should not be confused with a hammer in the field of technical analysis, a discipline that involves the study of past price charts to predict future prices. In this instance, a hammer is a single candlestick pattern with a long lower wick, a short body at the top, and with a little upper wick. As a rule of thumb, the lower wick must be at least twice as long as the upper wick to be a hammer.
A hammer pattern can also coincide with so-called golden ratios, also known as the Fibonacci retracement levels of roughly 161.8%, or more commonly, its inverse, 61.8%. When this happens, technical traders tend to view the hammer as a particularly strong signal that a stock price may reverse its prevailing trend.
However, this combined signal is not necessarily known as a golden hammer. Rather, it is simply a hammer pattern that takes place at a 61.8% golden retracement.
Golden Hammers in Gaming
Of note, the golden hammer has made its way into several successful video games, in which it is a go-to weapon. For instance, a golden hammer appears in several titles in the Super Mario game family. While it works like a regular hammer to smash obstacles that might kill the player’s on-screen character, the golden hammer is more powerful and can allow the character to float in midair. Thus, accurate to the definition, it is a weapon for nearly all uses.
Related terms:
Candlestick
A candlestick is a type of price chart that displays the high, low, open, and closing prices of a security for a specific period and originated from Japan. read more
Fibonacci Extensions
Fibonacci extensions are a method of technical analysis commonly used to aid in placing profit targets. read more
Fibonacci Retracement Levels
Fibonacci retracement levels are horizontal lines that indicate where support and resistance are likely to occur. They are based on Fibonacci numbers. read more
Hammer Candlestick
A hammer is a candlestick pattern that indicates a price decline is potentially over and an upward price move is forthcoming. read more
Heikin-Ashi Technique
The Heikin-Ashi technique averages price data to create a Japanese candlestick chart that filters out market noise. read more
Outside Reversal
Outside reversal is a chart pattern that shows when a security’s high and low price for the day exceed those achieved in the prior day’s trading session. read more
Swing High
Swing high is a technical analysis term that refers to price or indicator peak. Swing highs are analyzed to show trend direction and strength. read more