📈 CHART PATTERNS

Channels (Rising, Falling, Horizontal)

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A channel is two parallel trendlines drawn around price — one through the highs, one through the lows. Inside the channel, price oscillates between support and resistance; outside it, the trend changes. Channels are one of the cleanest structural reads on a chart because they tell you both where to trade and where the trade is wrong.

Three flavours exist: rising, falling, and horizontal. They are mechanically the same — the difference is the angle of the parallels.

Rising channel

SUPPORTRESISTANCERISING CHANNEL — HIGHER HIGHS AND HIGHER LOWS BETWEEN PARALLELS

Higher highs, higher lows, both ascending at the same rate. The lower parallel is dynamic support; the upper parallel is dynamic resistance. Both rise in lockstep.

Buyers and sellers are in equilibrium — the trend is intact but contained. Inside the channel: buy near the lower line, sell near the upper. Outside: the regime has changed.

Falling channel

RESISTANCESUPPORTFALLING CHANNEL — LOWER HIGHS AND LOWER LOWS BETWEEN PARALLELS

The mirror. Lower highs, lower lows. Upper parallel is dynamic resistance, lower is dynamic support. The downward slope is the trend; the parallels contain it.

The same logic applies in reverse: sell near the upper line, cover/long near the lower. A close beyond either parallel changes the read.

Horizontal channel

RESISTANCESUPPORTHORIZONTAL CHANNEL — RANGE BETWEEN FIXED LEVELS

The simplest version — a rectangular range. Fixed support, fixed resistance, no slope. This is the textbook consolidation pattern: price has decided neither direction is winning yet.

Horizontal channels are the default state of most markets most of the time. Trending periods are the exception, not the rule. Reading the range correctly — and knowing when to be inside it vs when to wait for a break — is more valuable than chasing trends.

Two ways to trade a channel

Approach How it works Best for
Range trade Buy near the lower parallel, sell near the upper. Repeat as long as the channel holds. Horizontal channels, slow trending channels with wide ranges
Trend trade Buy near the lower parallel only (in a rising channel) or sell near the upper only (in a falling channel). Trade in the channel’s direction. Rising and falling channels, where you want to compound with the trend
Breakout trade Wait for a decisive close beyond either parallel. Enter in the breakout direction, stop back inside the channel. Tight channels, after long consolidation, when volume is rising

How to trade them

1
Need at least 2 touches on each parallel. Two touches each (4 total) is the minimum to call it a channel. More touches = more meaningful.
2
Pick your approach in advance. Range, trend, or breakout. Don’t switch mid-trade because the channel did something unexpected.
3
Wait for the touch + rejection. Entering on a touch alone is taking a coin flip. Wait for a candle that closes back into the channel before entering.
4
Stop on the wrong side of the line. If you long the lower parallel, stop a few ticks below it. If price closes beyond, the channel is broken.
5
Target the opposite parallel. The full width of the channel is the natural target. Most channel trades work because the target is well-defined in advance.
6
Stand aside when the channel breaks. A clean close beyond the channel changes everything. Re-draw structure before committing capital on the other side.
Entry
Rejection at parallel, candle closes back inside
Stop
Just beyond the parallel + buffer
Target
Opposite parallel of the channel

When channels break

Every channel eventually fails. The break tells you something important: the equilibrium that defined the channel is over. A break out of a rising channel can mean acceleration (the trend got faster than the channel can contain) or exhaustion (the trend ran out of room). The volume and follow-through after the break tell you which one.

A clean break with strong volume and follow-through = trend acceleration. Trade the new direction.

A break with no follow-through, then back inside the channel = false break. Treat it as a stop-hunt and reset to the channel.

A break against the trend (rising channel breaking down) is often more decisive than a break with the trend. It signals a regime change, not a stop hunt.

Channels vs Wedges vs Triangles

Pattern Trendlines Implication
Channel Parallel, same slope Trend continuing within bounds
Wedge Both slope same direction at different rates Trend exhaustion, reversal
Triangle Convergent, opposite slopes Compression before continuation

Key insight: Channels are everywhere if you look for them. Most price action is contained within some channel at some timeframe. The trick is not to find channels — it’s to find channels that are tight enough and clean enough to trade. A four-touch channel on a clean trend is a setup. A two-touch channel on chop is wishful thinking.

The honest small print

Drawn channels are subjective. Ten traders draw ten slightly different parallels. The market does not care exactly where your line is — it cares about clusters of touches and reactions. A channel that holds four touches on heavy volume is a real channel; one you redrew yesterday to fit price isn’t. Draw once, refine sparingly, and accept that an imperfect line through real touches beats a perfect line through guesses.

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