Triángulo descendente Complete Guide

continuationbearish20 bars

What is Triángulo descendente?

El triángulo descendente es un patrón de continuación con sesgo bajista. Requiere al menos 20 barras para formarse. Este patrón es ampliamente reconocido en el análisis técnico y se puede encontrar en todos los mercados y marcos temporales.

Triángulo descendente pattern illustration

Identification Rules

  1. A clear prior downtrend must precede the formation of the descending triangle.
  2. The pattern must exhibit a relatively flat or horizontal lower support line, with at least two distinct lows touching or very near this level.
  3. The pattern must have a downward-sloping upper resistance line, with at least two distinct highs touching or very near this declining trendline.
  4. The formation of the pattern should span a minimum of 20 price bars to be considered valid.

References

  • Thomas N. Bulkowski (2005). Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns.
  • Steve Nison (2001). Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques.

FAQ

What is the typical price performance after a descending triangle breakdown?

Yes, false breakdowns and throwbacks are relatively common. Bulkowski's research shows that throwbacks, where the price briefly retests the broken support line before continuing its downward move, occur in approximately 64% of descending triangle breakdowns. Traders should look for confirmation, such as a strong close below support on high volume, to mitigate the risk of false signals.

More Analysis

Reviewed by KlineVision Research Team, CFA Charterholder, 10+ years quantitative research· 23 abr 2026

Parts of this page (FAQ, introductions) are AI-assisted. Core data and statistics are algorithmically computed. All pattern definitions are human-reviewed.

Data source: EODHD · Last updated: 23 abr 2026

Aviso legal: Esta página se basa en datos de mercado públicos y análisis técnico algorítmico. No constituye asesoramiento de inversión.

Data source: EODHD · © 2026 KlineVision AI