Harami Cross  and Example

Harami Cross and Example

A harami cross is a Japanese candlestick pattern that consists of a large candlestick that moves in the direction of the trend, followed by a small doji candlestick. The bearish pattern is confirmed by a price move lower following the pattern. A bullish harami cross pattern forms after a downtrend. The bullish pattern signals a possible price reversal to the upside, while the bearish pattern signals a possible price reversal to the downside. For a bearish harami cross, some traders prefer waiting for the price to move lower following the pattern before acting on it. A harami cross is a Japanese candlestick pattern that consists of a large candlestick that moves in the direction of the trend, followed by a small doji candlestick.

A bullish harami cross is a large down candle followed by a doji. It occurs during a downtrend.

What Is a Harami Cross?

A harami cross is a Japanese candlestick pattern that consists of a large candlestick that moves in the direction of the trend, followed by a small doji candlestick. The doji is completely contained within the prior candlestick’s body. The harami cross pattern suggests that the previous trend may be about to reverse. The pattern can be either bullish or bearish. The bullish pattern signals a possible price reversal to the upside, while the bearish pattern signals a possible price reversal to the downside.

Bullish and Bearish Harami Cross

Image by Julie Bang © Investopedia 2020

A bullish harami cross is a large down candle followed by a doji. It occurs during a downtrend.
The bullish harami cross is confirmed by a price move higher following the pattern.
A bearish harami cross is a large up candle followed by a doji. It occurs during an uptrend.
The bearish pattern is confirmed by a price move lower following the pattern.

Understanding the Harami Cross

A bullish harami cross pattern forms after a downtrend. The first candlestick is a long down candle (typically colored black or red) which indicates that the sellers are in control. The second candle, the doji, has a narrow range and opens above the previous day’s close. The doji candlestick closes near to the price it opened at. The doji must be completely contained with the real body of the previous candle.

The doji shows that some indecision has entered the minds of sellers. Typically, traders don't act on the pattern unless the price follows through to the upside within the next couple of candles. This is called confirmation. Sometimes the price may pause for a few candles after the doji, and then rise or fall. A rise above the open of the first candle helps confirm that the price may be heading higher.

A bearish harami cross forms after an uptrend. The first candlestick is a long up candle (typically colored white or green) which shows buyers are in control. This is followed by a doji, which shows indecision on the part of the buyers. Once again, the doji must be contained within the real body of the prior candle.

If the price drops following the pattern, this confirms the pattern. If the price continues to rise following the doji, the bearish pattern is invalidated.

Harami Cross Enhancers

For a bullish harami cross, some traders may act on the pattern as it forms, while others will wait for confirmation. Confirmation is a price move higher following the pattern. In addition to confirmation, traders may also give a bullish harami cross more weight or significance if it occurs at a major support level. If it does, there is a greater chance of a larger price move to the upside, especially if there is no nearby resistance overhead.

Traders may also watch other technical indicators, such as the relative strength index (RSI) moving up from oversold territory, or confirmation of a move higher from other indicators.

For a bearish harami cross, some traders prefer waiting for the price to move lower following the pattern before acting on it. In addition, the pattern may be more significant if occurs near a major resistance level. Other technical indicators, such as an RSI moving lower from overbought territory, may help confirm the bearish price move.

Trading the Harami Cross Pattern

It is not required to trade the harami cross. Some traders use it simply as an alert to be on the lookout for a reversal. If already long, a trader may take profits if a bearish harami cross appears and then the price starts dropping after the pattern. Or, a trader in a short position may look to exit if a bullish harami cross appears and then the price starts rising shortly after.

Some traders may opt to enter positions once the harami cross appears. If entering long on a bullish harami cross, a stop loss can be placed below the doji low or below the low of the first candlestick. A possible place to enter the long is when the price moves above the open of the first candle.

If entering a short, a stop loss can be placed above the high of the doji or above the high of the first candle. One possible place to enter the trade is when the price drops below the first candle open.

Harami cross patterns don't have profit targets. Therefore, traders need to use some other method of determining when to exit a profitable trade. Some options include using a trailing stop loss, finding an exit with Fibonacci extensions or retracements, or using a risk/reward ratio.

Example of a Harami Cross

The following chart shows a bearish harami cross in American Airlines Group Inc. (AAL). The price had been falling in an overall downtrend, but then flattened out into a large range. The price moved higher into a resistance area where it formed a bearish harami pattern. Following the pattern, the price moved lower. This provided confirmation and an opportunity to exit longs or enter short positions.

bearish harami cross example on daily price chart

Bearish Harami Cross on Daily Chart.  Investopedia

The price continued lower for a couple of weeks before reversing and then breaking above the resistance level.

Related terms:

Bearish Harami

A bearish harami is a two bar Japanese candlestick pattern that suggests prices may soon reverse to the downside. An uptrend precedes the formation of a bearish harami. read more

Bullish Harami

A bullish harami is a basic candlestick chart pattern indicating that a bearish stock market trend may be reversing.  read more

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

Closing Price

Even in the era of 24-hour trading, there is a closing price for a stock or other asset, and it is the last price it trades at during market hours. read more

Confirmation

Confirmation refers to the use of an additional indicator or indicators to substantiate a trend suggested by one indicator. read more

Counterattack Lines and Example

Counterattack lines are two-candle reversal patterns that appear on candlestick charts. There are both bullish and bearish versions. read more

Dark Cloud Cover and Example

Dark Cloud Cover is a bearish reversal candlestick pattern where a down candle opens higher but closes below the midpoint of the prior up candlestick. read more

Doji : What Is a Doji Candle Pattern?

A doji is a name for a session in which the candlestick for a security has an open and close that are virtually equal and are often components in patterns 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

show 13 more