The inverse head and shoulders is the bullish mirror image of the classic head and shoulders. It forms at the bottom of a downtrend and signals that the selling has exhausted itself. Three troughs — a deeper central one (the head) between two shallower ones (the shoulders) — followed by a neckline breakout.
The left shoulder forms as sellers push price to a new low, then price bounces. The head forms when sellers make one final, deeper push — but notice price recovers quickly and strongly. The right shoulder is key: sellers try to revisit the lows but cannot make a new low. The trend is shifting. When the neckline breaks to the upside, it signals accumulation is complete and buyers are taking control.
Key insight: The inverse H&S on higher timeframes — daily or weekly — is one of the strongest signals in technical analysis. When this pattern forms after a prolonged downtrend, the subsequent move can be substantial. Do not underestimate how far price can run after a major base like this resolves.
The other half is what’s happening in your head when you’re in the trade. Fear, ego, revenge trading, breaking your own stops — that’s where most accounts actually lose money. Not bad setups.