📈 CHART PATTERNS

M Top Pattern (Double Top)

BearishReversal
Neckline Top 1 Top 2

The M top — also called a double top — is the bearish mirror of the W bottom and one of the most common reversal patterns. Price rallies to a resistance level, pulls back, then retests that resistance and fails. The two highs create the M shape.

What it tells you

The first high shows buyers pushed price into a resistance zone. The pullback shows sellers defending. The second test of that resistance is the moment of truth — if price cannot break through again, it confirms that buyers are exhausted and sellers are in control. The neckline break is when the pattern is confirmed and the reversal is underway.

How to trade it

1
Identify the pattern. Two highs at approximately the same price level with a pullback between them. Watch for the second high being slightly lower than the first — a sign of weakening momentum.
2
Wait for the neckline break. Do not short at the second top. Wait for price to close below the neckline (the low between the two tops).
3
Enter on the break or retest. Enter short on the candle that breaks the neckline, or wait for a retest of the neckline as resistance from below.
4
Set your stop. Place your stop above the second high. If price makes a new high, the pattern has failed.
5
Set your target. Measure the distance from the tops to the neckline and project that same distance below the neckline breakdown.
Entry
On neckline breakdown close
Stop
Above second high
Target
Neckline height projected down

Key insight: The second top on declining volume is a powerful signal. If buyers cannot push volume on a second attempt at the highs, it suggests the demand is fading. That divergence is one of the clearest warnings the M top will follow through.

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Trading Psychology

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