
Upside Tasuki Gap and Example
An Upside Tasuki Gap is a three-bar candlestick formation that is commonly used to signal the continuation of the current trend. Alternatively, David could place a buy stop order slightly above the pattern’s second candlestick high at $63.39 to confirm the uptrend has resumed and set his stop under the third candlestick’s low at $62.93. 
What Is an Upside Tasuki Gap?
An Upside Tasuki Gap is a three-bar candlestick formation that is commonly used to signal the continuation of the current trend.
- The first bar is a large white/green candlestick within a defined uptrend.
- The second bar is another white/green candlestick with an opening price that has gapped above the close of the previous bar.
- The third bar is a black/red candlestick that partially closes the gap between the first two bars.
Image by Julie Bang © Investopedia 2019



Understanding the Upside Tasuki Gap
The Upside Tasuki Gap demonstrates an uptrend’s strength through the gap open of the pattern’s second candle, as well as its escalating price. The pattern’s third candle indicates a pause in the trend as the bears attempt to move the price lower but cannot close the gap between the first and second candle. The bear’s inability to close the gap suggests the uptrend will likely continue.
Traders may also refer to the pattern as a Bullish Tasuki Gap or the Upward Gap Tasuki. Its adverse counterpart, which occurs in a bearish market, is known as a Downward Tasuki Gap. Both patterns are predicted to have originated from Japanese technical analysis.
The Upside Tasuki Gap is one of many gap patterns that can form throughout a bullish trend. Supporting uptrend gap patterns are also usually used in conjunction with the Upside Tasuki Gap to add confirmation to a bullish trading strategy.
Gaps are significant price changes that typically occur from one trading day to the next. Typical gap patterns form over two to three days of trading. It is not uncommon to see the price of an asset close a price gap previously created. Sometimes traders push the price higher too quickly, which can result in a slight pullback. The black/red candlestick that forms the Upside Tasuki Gap acts as a period of minor consolidation before the bulls continue to send the price higher.
Upside Tasuki Gap Within an Uptrend
Upside Tasuki Gaps can occur at any time during a bullish trending pattern. Bullish patterns typically follow a cycle that begins with a breakaway gap confirming a reversal and then several runaway gaps followed by an exhaustion gap. As the price of a security trends higher, it often forms an ascending channel. Traders construct the pattern by drawing two upward sloping lines at the peak and trough levels of price action. An Upside Tasuki Gap can occur within an ascending channel that also includes one or several of the gaps mentioned above.
Practical Example of Trading the Tasuki Gap
David spots an Upside Tasuki Gap on the iShares 10+ Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF chart and wants to use the pattern to enter a trade and set risk parameters. He could enter on the close of the third red candle at $62.97 and place his stop-loss order beneath the low of the first candlestick at $62.08. Alternatively, David could place a buy stop order slightly above the pattern’s second candlestick high at $63.39 to confirm the uptrend has resumed and set his stop under the third candlestick’s low at $62.93.
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Related terms:
Ascending Channel
An ascending channel is the price action contained between upward sloping parallel lines. Higher highs and higher lows characterize this pattern. read more
Bear
A bear is one who thinks that market prices will soon decline, or has general market pessimism. read more
Bearish Abandoned Baby
A bearish abandoned baby is a type of candlestick pattern identified by traders to signal a reversal in the current uptrend. read more
Breakaway Gap
A breakaway gap is a price gap through resistance or support. It is usually accompanied by high volume and occurs early in a trend. read more
Bull
A bull is an investor who invests in a security expecting the price will rise. Discover what bullish investors look for in stocks and other assets. read more
Buy Stop Order
A buy stop order directs to an order in which a market buy order is placed on a security once it hits a pre-determined strike price. 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
Consolidation
Consolidation is a technical analysis term referring to security prices oscillating within a corridor and is generally interpreted as market indecisiveness. 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
Downside Tasuki Gap and Example
A Downside Tasuki Gap is a three-candle formation that may signal the continuation of the current downtrend. read more