Candlestick Patterns

Outside BarPattern

"Master the Directional (based on close) Expansion (context-driven) signal that outlines a critical shift in market sentiment."

Definition

The Outside Bar Candlestick Pattern is a two-candle expansion pattern that forms when the second candle completely engulfs the entire range (high and low) of the previous candle. It represents a shift from hesitation to aggression, where volatility expands sharply and one side takes decisive control.

In Simple Words

"The market moves from hesitation to aggression, volatility expands sharply, and one side takes decisive control."

Core Message

  • Volatility explodes.
  • One side overwhelms the other.
  • Market shifts from balance to dominance.

Visual Interpretation

Let’s break the candle visually and logically.

1

First Candle (Reference)

Smaller range, represents balance or reduced momentum.

2

Second Candle (Outside Bar)

High > Prev High, Low < Prev Low, engulfs prior range.

3

Close Location

Determines directional bias (Bullish if near high, Bearish if near low).

"A larger candle completely engulfs the previous smaller candle, signaling an explosion in volatility and a victory for one side."

Market Psychology

1

Balance

Market may be consolidating or trending slowly

Participation moderate

Sides balanced

2

Battle

Both buyers and sellers push aggressively

Stops on both sides triggered

One side overpowers

3

Victor

Price closes decisively in one direction

Indecision is over

Control shifted decisively

"The market shifts from total fear (Phase 1) to confident realization (Phase 4) in a single session."

Technical Identification

Pattern Formation Rules

Pattern consists of two candles

Why? Comparison.

Second candle’s high > previous high

Why? Expansion up.

Second candle’s low < previous low

Why? Expansion down.

Entire range of first candle is engulfed

Why? dominance.

Close location defines directional bias

Why? Direction.

Strict Rule: If visual conditions are not met, the pattern is invalid.

Ideal Market Conditions

Outside Bar works best when:

  • Near key support or resistance
  • Supply/Demand zones
  • After consolidation or Inside Bars
  • During breakout attempts
  • Rejection from important levels

"Weak context: Random mid-range locations, extremely low-volume markets, insignificant ranges."

Signal Verification

Confirmation

Did the dominant side retain control after expansion?

  • Follow-through in the direction of the close
  • Price holding above/below the Outside Bar midpoint
  • Alignment with higher timeframe trend
  • Key market structure
Warning

Without confirmation: Expansion without acceptance is only noise.

Failure Conditions

  • Price immediately retraces inside the bar’s range
  • Expansion occurs without follow-through
  • Pattern forms against a strong trend
  • Driven by temporary volatility spikes
Truth: Expansion without acceptance is only noise.

Common Misconceptions

"Every Outside Bar is a reversal"

It is an expansion pattern, direction depends on context.

"Bigger Outside Bars are always better"

Too big can mean exhaustion.

"Direction is obvious without context"

Must check the close and trend.

Final Explanation in One Line

"An Outside Bar does not whisper — it announces a battle and declares a winner. Understanding why expansion matters after balance is the real educational edge."

Quick Facts

Difficulty
Intermediate
Category
Candlestick Pattern
Type
Modern

Who Should Use This

Beginners

Learn how volatility expansion looks on charts.

Intermediate

Combine with support/resistance and confirmation logic.

Advanced

Use as a momentum or reversal trigger with structure-based risk.

Video Coming Soon

Detailed video breakdown is in production.

Save to Diary

Save Outside Bar to your personal collection for quick reference.

Advanced Course

Detailed walkthrough coming soon

In Production

Essential Reading

Technical Analysis For Dummies
Technical Analysis For Dummies

by Barbara Rockefeller

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Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets

by John J. Murphy

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Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques
Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques

by Steve Nison

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Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer: While due care has been taken to ensure the accuracy, clarity, and relevance of the information, the content is intended solely for educational purposes. Financial terms and concepts are interpretative tools; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This content does not constitute financial, investment, or advisory recommendations of any kind.

Published: Feb 2026Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer:While due care is taken to ensure the accuracy and clarity of information provided, the sheer complexity of data arrangements may lead to unintentional discrepancies. This content is for educational purposes only. Financial markets involve significant risk; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This does not constitute financial or investment advice.