Continuation Patterns

Bear FlagPattern

"A reliable continuation pattern that signals a brief pause in a downtrend before the next bearish breakdown."

Definition

The Bear Flag pattern forms during a strong downtrend. After aggressive selling pushes price lower (Flagpole), short-covering and bargain-hunting cause a mild rebound or consolidation (Flag). This bounce is controlled and lacks strength, showing that buyers are weak. Sellers use this pause to re-enter or add positions. When price breaks below the lower boundary of the flag, bearish momentum resumes in the direction of the primary trend.

Simple Explanation

"Imagine a ball falling off a cliff (Flagpole), hitting a ledge and bouncing slightly (Flag), before rolling off and falling again (Breakdown). The dominant force is gravity (selling)."

Core Message

  • The dominant trend remains bearish
  • The rebound is corrective, not a reversal
  • Buyers lack conviction during consolidation
  • Breakdown confirms continuation of selling pressure

Visual Interpretation

Flagpole

A strong, impulsive downward move accompanied by expanding volume, indicating decisive seller control.

Flag

A small upward-sloping channel or tight range where price retraces modestly with declining volume.

Breakdown

Price breaks below the lower boundary of the flag, confirming the continuation of the downtrend.

Summary

"Visually, the Bear Flag resembles a flag attached to a downward pole. The key is the weak upward retracement followed by a strong downside break, signaling trend continuation."

Market Psychology

Phase 1

Impulse Sell-Off

  • Fear, negative news, or distribution triggers aggressive selling.
  • Momentum traders join the move.
Phase 2

Short Covering

  • Some sellers book profits, causing a mild bounce.
  • Buyers step in cautiously but without strength.
Phase 3

Consolidation

  • The market pauses as supply is absorbed at slightly higher prices.
  • Volume contracts as the bounce loses steam.
Phase 4

Continuation Breakdown

  • Fresh sellers enter. Stops below support are triggered, accelerating the downtrend.

Identification Rules

1

Prior Downtrend

A clear prior downtrend must exist.

2

Flagpole

The flagpole should be sharp and impulsive.

3

Flag Slope

The flag should slope slightly upward or move sideways.

4

Volume

Volume should contract during flag formation.

5

Breakdown

Breakdown must occur below the lower flag boundary.

Execution Strategy

1

Entry Signal

Sell on breakdown below flag

2

Stop Loss

Stop loss above flag high

3

Take Profit

Target pole height subtracted from breakdown

Signal Confirmation

Is the breakdown real?

  • Strong bearish candle closing below flag support
  • Expansion in volume on the breakdown
  • Failure of price to reclaim the broken support
  • Optional pullback to flag support acting as resistance

Caution: Without a confirmed breakdown, the structure is only consolidation.

Common Mistakes

Myth: Shorting early is smart

Risky. Confirmation comes only on breakdown.

Myth: Only for bear markets

They appear in downtrends across all market conditions and timeframes.

How to Trade: Bear Flag

Step-by-step masterclass on trading this pattern profitably.

Coming Soon

Quick Facts

Difficulty
Beginner
Category
Chart Pattern
Type
Bearish

Video Coming Soon

Detailed video breakdown is in production.

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Essential Reading

Technical Analysis For Dummies
Technical Analysis For Dummies

by Barbara Rockefeller

Read Review
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets

by John J. Murphy

Read Review
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns

by Thomas N. Bulkowski

Read Review

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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.