"A bearish reversal pattern that signals weakening bullish momentum despite rising prices."
Definition
During a rising wedge, price moves upward, but each advance becomes weaker. Buyers are still pushing prices higher, yet they are doing so with less conviction. Sellers gradually step in earlier, tightening the range. This compression reveals loss of momentum. When price breaks below the lower trendline, it signals that sellers have taken control and a bearish reversal is underway.
Simple Explanation
"The price is going up, but it is "running out of gas". The uphills are getting less steep and the consolidation is getting tighter. Eventually, gravity takes over and it drops."
Core Message
- Price is rising, but momentum is weakening
- Buyers are losing control gradually
- Selling pressure is building quietly
- Breakdown confirms bearish reversal
Visual Interpretation
Converging Trendlines
Both support and resistance trendlines slope upward but move closer together. This convergence visually reflects slowing upside momentum.
Higher Highs & Higher Lows
Price continues to make higher highs and higher lows, but the distance between them reduces, indicating reduced strength behind each move.
Compression Zone
As price approaches the wedge apex, volatility contracts and the price range tightens, signaling an impending directional move.
Breakdown Area
A decisive break below the lower trendline confirms the pattern and marks the transition from bullish control to bearish dominance.
Summary
"Visually, the Rising Wedge looks like an upward-sloping narrowing channel. The key insight is that rising price alone does not mean strength—structure and momentum matter more."
Market Psychology
Late-Stage Buying
- The pattern often forms near the end of an uptrend. Buyers are still active, but enthusiasm is fading.
Distribution
- Smart money begins distributing positions into rising prices. Sellers step in earlier, limiting upside expansion.
Momentum Loss
- Each new high attracts fewer buyers. Volatility contracts, and the market becomes vulnerable to reversal.
Bearish Breakdown
- Once support breaks, trapped buyers exit, fresh sellers enter, and the downtrend begins.
Identification Rules
Convergence
Both trendlines must slope upward and converge.
Higher Highs/Lows
Price must form higher highs and higher lows.
Volume
Volume typically declines during formation.
Trend
The wedge should form after an uptrend or extended rally.
Execution Strategy
Entry Signal
Sell on support breakdown
Stop Loss
Stop loss above wedge high
Take Profit
Target wedge height
Signal Confirmation
Is the reversal real?
- Strong bearish candle closing below wedge support
- Expansion in volume on breakdown
- Failure of price to reclaim the broken trendline
- Bearish follow-through after breakdown
Caution: Avoid early entries while price is still inside the wedge, as false signals are common.
Common Mistakes
Myth: Always forms at tops
Can appear in corrective rallies within downtrends (Bearish Continuation).
Myth: Rising = Bullish
No. The "shape" of the rise (narrowing) tracks exhaustion.
How to Trade: Rising Wedge
Step-by-step masterclass on trading this pattern profitably.
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