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Triangles and Wedges Strategy

Last Update: July 15th, 2019

We have covered most of the important technical chart patterns in our strategy section. There are still some strategies left though. “Triangles” and “Wedges” are two of the 10 most important chart patterns and in this article we´ll explain how to trade them. It´s true that they are different patterns, but they are very similar so we´ll teach both of them in one article.

Apart from special occasions which are very rare, we all know that the price doesn´t go up or down in a straight line. Instead, it forms trends following different types of waves, as we have explained in the “Elliot Wave Strategy”. In an uptrend, the first leg goes up and then consolidates before starting the second leg, and vice versa for the downtrend.

During the consolidation period, the price forms a triangle or a wedge. In order to have a better view, you should change the charts to a smaller time frame.
If you are trading 1-hour charts, when the consolidation begins to take place change to 5 or 15-minute charts and draw a trend line connecting the tops and another one connecting the bottoms of the price range during that consolidation. As the name indicates, a triangle is formed when the top and the bottom trend lines culminate in a single point, confining the price in between them. In a wedge, the price breaks out in either direction before the two trend lines meet. In the images below you can see a triangle and a wedge being formed.

 

Rising wedge

 

Asymmetrical rising wedge

 

Descending triangle

 

You can start trading a wedge or a triangle while it is being formed. As you can see from the first picture, the top and the bottom lines are providing resistance and support respectively.
You can draw the resistance line once the price has formed two peaks and you can draw the support line once the price has formed two lows. The second low should be higher than the first one in order to be considered a wedge or a triangle. The simplest and most obvious way to trade a wedge or a triangle is to trade between those two lines. You basically sell at the top line with a stop above the resistance and buy at the bottom line with a stop below the support.

This strategy works best in bigger time frame charts, like daily or 4-hour charts, because there´s more room between the lines. This way the profit target can be bigger and the reward/risk ratio is bigger too. If you trade smaller timeframe charts, you should choose a broker with small spreads and a fast execution.

That´s one way to take advantage of these chart formations, but the wedges and the triangles are most famous for indicating breakouts. In order to predict which way the breakout is going to happen, we should know the types of these chart patterns. There are three types of wedges and triangles: ascending wedge/triangle, descending wedge/triangle and symmetrical wedge/triangle.

Ascending Wedge/Triangle

In the first chart below, there is a rising/descending wedge being formed after an uptrend. This means that the sellers are matching the buyers, squeezing the price into a tight range, so a reverse could be near. After the break to the downside, we see that the bottom line, which acted as support, now turns into resistance.
Some traders sell when the price breaks the bottom line and some place a sell stop just below that line. But we all know that in forex nothing works exactly to the pip and fake breakouts (fake-outs) are not uncommon. I prefer to wait until the price clearly closes below the bottom line and try to sell on the retrace. This way you minimize the risk and maximize the profit target. The same logic applies to triangles.

The price is forming an ascending wedge

 

Price breaks the top line which turns into resistance

 

Descending Wedge/Triangle

The descending wedges and triangles are the opposite of the ascending ones and become valid after a downtrend. So instead of selling after the break of the bottom line, you buy after the top line gives way. When you trade these patterns, the profit target you aim for should be as big as the space between the first top and the first bottom of the range, as shown in the second chart below. The reason I´m saying the first top and the first bottom is because there are occasions when neither of the two lines of the wedge is horizontal, like the ascending one above.

Descending wedge is being formed after a downtrend

After the break to the upside the target is as big as the space between the first top and the first bottom.

 

Symmetrical Wedge/Triangle

In a symmetrical triangle, you can trade between the two lines and after the breakout

During these formations, the bulls and the bears are putting up a bitter fight, until one side eventually gives up. It doesn´t matter if this consolidation takes place after an uptrend or a downtrend. When you use ascending and descending wedge or triangle chart patterns for trading, you know which way the price will go after the breakout, but symmetrical wedges and triangles don´t give you a clear direction. That doesn´t mean you cannot trade them though; you can trade them in the same way you trade rising and falling wedges/triangles. You buy and sell while the price is bouncing inside the two lines of the triangle. And of course, you can trade the breakout in either side by placing a stop buy or a stop sell order above and below the triangle.
I personally fancy opening a trade after the price breaks and retests one of the lines.

About the author

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Skerdian Meta // Lead Analyst
Skerdian Meta Lead Analyst. Skerdian is a professional Forex trader and a market analyst. He has been actively engaged in market analysis for the past 11 years. Before becoming our head analyst, Skerdian served as a trader and market analyst in Saxo Bank's local branch, Aksioner. Skerdian specialized in experimenting with developing models and hands-on trading. Skerdian has a masters degree in finance and investment.