Three Outside Down Complete Guide
What is Three Outside Down?
The Three Outside Down is a three-candle bearish reversal pattern that typically appears at the peak of an uptrend. It is essentially a confirmed Bearish Engulfing pattern. The formation begins with a small bullish candle, followed by a significantly larger bearish candle that completely wraps around or 'engulfs' the body of the first day. The third day is a bearish candle that closes below the second day's close, providing the necessary confirmation that the trend has shifted from bullish to bearish. Technically, this pattern represents a decisive shift in market sentiment. On the first day, bulls are in control but losing momentum. On the second day, bears take over aggressively, driving prices above the previous close before crashing down below the previous open. The third day confirms that the selling pressure is sustained. According to Thomas Bulkowski’s research in the 'Encyclopedia of Candlestick Charts,' this pattern acts as a bearish reversal 69% of the time in a bull market. While Steve Nison emphasizes the importance of the engulfing candle, Bulkowski’s data suggests that the third-day confirmation significantly improves the reliability of the trade signal compared to a standard two-day engulfing pattern. Volume typically expands on the second and third days, indicating strong institutional participation in the reversal. Traders often look for this pattern near resistance levels or overbought RSI conditions to increase the probability of success. While it is a reliable signal, its frequency is moderate. Bulkowski ranks its overall performance as 21st out of 103 candle patterns, making it a solid choice for technical traders seeking trend exhaustion signals.
Identification Rules
- El mercado debe estar en una tendencia alcista clara y establecida antes del patrón.
- La primera vela es una vela alcista (blanca o verde) pequeña.
- The second candle is a large bearish (black or red) candle that completely engulfs the body of the first candle.
- La tercera vela es una vela bajista que cierra por debajo del cierre de la segunda vela.
References
- Thomas N. Bulkowski (2005). Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns.
- Steve Nison (2001). Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques.
FAQ
¿En qué se diferencia esto de un patrón envolvente bajista estándar?
El patrón Tres Afuera Abajo incluye una tercera vela como confirmación. El Envolvente Bajista es solo un patrón de dos velas; el cierre más bajo del tercer día en este patrón proporciona una mayor confianza estadística.
¿Cuál es la fiabilidad histórica de este patrón?
According to Bulkowski, it has a 69% reversal rate in bull markets, ranking it 21st out of 103 patterns for overall performance.
¿Debería considerarse el volumen al operar este patrón?
Sí, el aumento del volumen en el segundo día (envolvente) y el tercer día (confirmación) normalmente fortalece la señal bajista.
¿Dónde debería colocarse un stop-loss?
A common technical placement for a stop-loss is just above the high of the second (engulfing) candle.
¿Este patrón funciona en todos los marcos temporales?
While it appears on all timeframes, it is most reliable on daily and weekly charts where it reflects significant shifts in institutional sentiment.
More Analysis
Parts of this page (FAQ, introductions) are AI-assisted. Core data and statistics are algorithmically computed. All pattern definitions are human-reviewed.
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