📈 CHART PATTERNS

Pennant Pattern

Continuation
Pennant

The pennant is similar to a flag but the consolidation takes the form of a small symmetrical triangle rather than a parallel channel. The flagpole is the same sharp impulsive move; what differs is how price consolidates — converging into a tighter and tighter range before breaking out.

What it tells you

The converging trendlines of the pennant represent compressed energy. Both buyers and sellers are making smaller and smaller moves — the range is tightening. This compression typically precedes an explosive directional move. Unlike a symmetrical triangle that can break either way, the pennant forms after a clear directional move and is biased to break in the same direction as that move.

How to trade it

1
Identify the flagpole. A strong, decisive move in one direction. This sets the directional bias for the pattern.
2
Identify the pennant. Converging trendlines forming a small triangle. It should be relatively short in duration — similar to a flag.
3
Enter on the breakout. In the direction of the original flagpole. Wait for a candle close outside the converging trendlines.
4
Set your stop. Inside the pennant — below the pennant for long trades, above for short trades.
5
Measure your target. Same as the flag — flagpole length added to the breakout point.
Entry
Breakout close through converging trendline
Stop
Inside the pennant
Target
Flagpole length from breakout

Key insight: The pennant and the flag are sometimes confused. The difference is the shape of the consolidation — parallel channel for a flag, converging triangle for a pennant. Both are valid continuation patterns. When in doubt, trade the breakout in the direction of the prior move and let price tell you whether the continuation is real.

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Trading Psychology

Getting the setup right is only half the equation

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.

Read the Trading Psychology Guide →