Hammer vs Hanging Man — same shape, opposite signal

They look identical on the chart — small body near the top, long lower wick, almost no upper wick. The difference between them is not the shape; it is the trend they appear in. Get that wrong and you trade the opposite direction.

Auteur: Charts QuestPublié: Mis à jour:

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The single hardest thing about hammer-shaped candles is that the "hammer" and the "hanging man" are visually the same candle. Same small body near the top. Same long lower wick. Same lack of an upper wick. The difference is entirely contextual: a hammer prints inside a downtrend and points toward a potential reversal up; a hanging man prints inside an uptrend and points toward a potential reversal down.

That single fact about context is the entire trade. Every other detail beginners chase — body colour, exact wick-to-body ratio, presence of a slight upper wick — is secondary to which trend the candle appeared in. A hammer in chop is not a hammer at all; it is just an indecisive candle.

What both share: the story of intra-period rejection. Price was pushed down hard during the time window (creating the long lower wick) and then bought back to close near the high. In a downtrend that rejection reads as exhausted sellers, which is the bullish read. In an uptrend the same rejection by the same depth of long buyers reads as a warning — buyers had to defend lower prices intraday inside a rising market that supposedly had no reason to be defended yet. That defence is the bearish read.

Both require confirmation to be tradable, and the confirmation is symmetric: a hammer is confirmed by the next candle closing above the hammer''s body; a hanging man is confirmed by the next candle closing below the hanging man''s body. Without confirmation, both are stalls, not reversals.

The cheapest beginner mistake is to learn "hammer = buy" and then buy every long-lower-wick candle. About half the time, that candle is sitting at the top of an uptrend and the right read was short. Read the context first, the shape second.

CritèreHammerHanging Man
Trend it appears inDowntrend (reversal candidate up)Uptrend (reversal candidate down)
Body locationTop of the candle rangeTop of the candle range
Lower wickAt least twice the body heightAt least twice the body height
Bias when confirmedBullishBearish
Confirmation candleClose above hammer bodyClose below hanging-man body
Stop placementBelow the hammer's lowAbove the hanging-man's high
Most common errorActing before confirmationTreating it as bullish because of the shape

Quand utiliser Hammer

When the candle prints after a clear downtrend and lands at a known support level, that''s the hammer''s ideal context. The lower wick says sellers tried to extend and were rejected; the long body close says buyers stepped in with size. Wait for the next candle to confirm by closing above the hammer''s body (ideally above its high); enter on confirmation; invalidation is below the hammer''s low. If support, hammer, and confirmation all line up, the setup has the structural geometry the textbook describes.

Quand utiliser Hanging Man

When the same shape prints after a clear uptrend — ideally near a known resistance or after several extended green candles — that's the hanging man. The bearish read isn't because the candle looks scary; it's because buyers had to defend lower prices inside an uptrend they should be controlling. Confirmation is a close below the hanging man's body; entry is on confirmation; invalidation is above the hanging man's high. If resistance, hanging man, and confirmation all line up, the bearish structural geometry mirrors the bullish hammer setup.

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Questions fréquentes

Is colour a reliable way to tell them apart?add

No. Both can print as green or red. Trend context is the only reliable distinction.

What if there's no trend at all?add

Then the candle is neither a hammer nor a hanging man — it's just an indecisive candle in chop. Treat it as no signal.

How strict does the 2:1 wick-to-body ratio need to be?add

Strict enough to be visually obvious. If you have to squint to decide, the pattern isn't clean enough to act on.

Can a single candle reverse a trend?add

It can mark the spot where a reversal began, but reversal is a sequence — higher low or lower high — not a single candle. Confirmation is the price you pay to be sure.