Single candlestick patterns give us clues. Two-candle patterns give us conviction.
The Engulfing Pattern is one of the most powerful reversal signals in technical analysis — and one of the most reliable when it appears at the right location.
An engulfing pattern forms when the second candle’s body completely engulfs the first candle’s body.
The second candle opens beyond the first candle’s close and closes beyond the first candle’s open — completely swallowing it.
Structure:
Location: After a downtrend or at a key support level.
What it tells you:
Day one — sellers in complete control. Bearish candle.
Day two — buyers open lower than day one’s close and then push price so aggressively that they close ABOVE day one’s open.
Buyers didn’t just win day two — they completely erased everything sellers achieved on day one and went further.
Interpretation:
A dramatic shift in momentum. Buyers have overwhelmed sellers with force. High probability reversal signal.
Trading Bullish Engulfing:
Strongest when:
Structure:
Location: After an uptrend or at a key resistance level.
What it tells you:
Day one — buyers in complete control. Bullish candle.
Day two — sellers open higher than day one’s close and then push price so aggressively that they close BELOW day one’s open.
Sellers didn’t just win day two — they completely erased everything buyers achieved and went further.
Interpretation:
Dramatic shift in momentum. Sellers have overwhelmed buyers. High probability reversal signal.
Trading Bearish Engulfing:
Strongest when:
The larger the engulfing candle relative to the first candle — the stronger the signal.
Barely engulfing:
Second candle just slightly larger than first.
Weak signal — momentum shift not dramatic.
Strongly engulfing:
Second candle is 2-3 times larger than first.
Strong signal — massive momentum shift.
Completely engulfing including wicks:
Second candle body covers not just the first body but also the wicks.
Very strong signal — total domination by the opposing side.
The psychology behind engulfing patterns is powerful:
Bullish Engulfing scenario:
Traders who sold on day one see day two open lower — they feel validated. Then price starts rising. And rising. And keeps rising past their entry point. Now they are trapped in a losing short position and forced to buy to cover — adding fuel to the rally.
Bearish Engulfing scenario:
Traders who bought on day one see day two open higher — they feel great. Then price starts falling. And falling. Past their entry point. Now trapped in a losing long — forced to sell — adding fuel to the decline.
Engulfing patterns create a cascade effect — trapping one side and forcing them to exit, which accelerates the move in the other direction.
Compared to single candle patterns like the Hammer or Shooting Star:
Mistake 1 — Body must engulf body
The engulfing candle’s body must cover the previous candle’s body. Wicks do not count for the basic definition.
Mistake 2 — Ignoring trend context
A bullish engulfing in the middle of a strong downtrend is far less reliable than one at a major support after an extended decline.
Mistake 3 — Small size difference
If the second candle barely engulfs the first — the signal is weak. Look for clearly dominant second candles.
In the next topic we will study the Morning Star and Evening Star — powerful three-candle reversal patterns.