A Bearish Reversal refers to a change in market sentiment where an asset’s uptrend shifts into a downtrend. It signals that buying pressure is weakening and sellers are beginning to take control, potentially leading to a sustained price decline.
Bearish reversals are important to traders because they can indicate optimal points to:
- Exit long positions;
- Enter short positions;
- Adjust risk management strategies, such as trailing stops or protective orders.
Common signs of a bearish reversal include:
- Bearish candlestick patterns, such as:
- Evening Star
- Bearish Engulfing
- Shooting Star
- Breakdown of key support levels or trendlines;
- Divergence between price and momentum indicators like RSI or MACD;
- Decreasing volume on upward moves followed by spikes in selling volume.
- Evening Star
- Bearish Engulfing
- Shooting Star
Types of bearish reversals:
- Short-term: May last minutes or hours, typically seen on lower timeframes (e.g., 5M, 15M charts);
- Long-term: Occurs on daily or weekly charts and may signal major trend shifts due to broader fundamental or macroeconomic factors.
How traders use it:
- Confirm trend reversal before entering short trades;
- Use stop-losses above recent highs to manage risk;
- Combine with other tools (moving averages, Fibonacci levels, Bollinger Bands) for stronger confirmation.
Bearish reversal signals can be monitored on FxPro platforms like MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, and cTrader, all of which offer advanced charting tools, technical indicators, and pattern recognition features to help identify potential turning points in real time.