#AEGISVOPAK #NIFTY50 #CANDLESTICKPATTERN

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#AEGISVOPAK #NIFTY50 #CANDLESTICKPATTERNAegis Vopak Terminals LimitedNSE:AEGISVOPAKcbk1484Candle ① — Hammer (Bullish Pin Bar) ⬅️ The first candle you've marked has: Small real body Long lower shadow Very little upper wick Appears after a prolonged downtrend This is a classic Hammer. Psychology During the week: Bears pushed price much lower. Buyers absorbed all that selling. Price closed back near the high of the candle. Institutional message: "We are no longer willing to sell lower." This is the first warning that sellers are weakening. Candle ② — Doji / Spinning Top The second candle has Tiny body Long wicks Open and close almost equal This is either ✔ Doji or ✔ Spinning Top depending on your broker's OHLC data. Psychology Nobody is in control. Buyers and sellers are balanced. After a downtrend this means The selling pressure has stopped. This is called market equilibrium. Candle ③ — Bullish Engulfing (Confirmation) The third candle is the important one. Large bullish body Closes above previous candle Breaks the short-term bearish structure This is a textbook Bullish Engulfing Together They Form... This is not a single candlestick pattern. It is a three-step reversal sequence. Hammer ↓ Doji ↓ Bullish Engulfing Professional traders call this an Bottoming Reversal Sequence or Accumulation Reversal Smart Money Interpretation This is where retail traders usually get confused. Week 1 Hammer appears. Retail says: "Just another candle." Institution says: "We started buying." Week 2 Doji appears. Retail says: "Nothing is happening." Institution says: "We absorbed all remaining supply." Week 3 Bullish Engulfing. Retail finally notices. Institution has already built most of the position. Why It Worked So Well Notice what happened afterward. Immediately after these three candles: ✅ Higher Low ↓ ✅ Break of Swing High ↓ ✅ Change of Character (CHoCH) ↓ ✅ Break of Structure (BOS) ↓ ✅ Strong Rally This is exactly how institutional reversals often unfold. The Probability On a weekly chart, when this sequence appears: After a long decline ✅ At a major support area ✅ Followed by a break of structure ✅ I would rate it: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (80–85% probability) That's why weekly reversal patterns are much more reliable than daily ones. One More Thing I Noticed (This Is Advanced) The candle sequence is also forming something called a Morning Doji Star variation. A textbook Morning Doji Star requires: Large bearish candle ✅ Doji ⭐ Strong bullish candle closing deep into the first bearish candle ✅ Your chart isn't a perfect textbook example because the first candle is a Hammer rather than a long bearish candle, but structurally it's very similar. Many experienced price-action traders would call this a Morning Star–type reversal rather than insist on a strict textbook label. My Favorite Observation This is actually the part that stands out to me more than the candlestick names. The Hammer (①), Doji (②), and Bullish Engulfing (③) all occurred at nearly the same price level. That tells us institutions repeatedly defended that zone. Then, once selling pressure was exhausted, price broke higher and never revisited those lows. That's the type of behavior I look for before considering a high-conviction swing trade. So in this chart, I would place more weight on the location (support + accumulation) than on the candlestick names alone. The combination of location + sequence + subsequent break of structure is what made this a high-probability setup.