


<img src=”https://storage.googleapis.com/prod-zenger-upload/image/20230922/feat_e3865fbb-021b-4c82-891d-ea63ec584bba.jpg” alt=”Tesla, Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) was falling slightly on Friday, testing the 50-day simple moving average (SMA) as support after Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest disposed of $15.94 million worth of the stock. PHOTO BY TESLA FANS SCHWEIZ/UNSPLASH”>
Tesla, Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) was falling slightly on Friday, testing the 50-day simple moving average (SMA) as support after Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest disposed of $15.94 million worth of the stock.
The EV-giant’s move lower confirmed the stock’s downtrend remains intact, with the formation of another lower low. The local bottom may be in, because Tesla was working to print a hammer candlestick on the daily chart.
A hammer candlestick pattern forms when a red or green candlestick prints, with a long lower wick and a short upper body, which resembles a hammer.
A hammer candlestick, when found in a downtrend, can indicate a reversal to the upside on the horizon. It is a lagging indicator because the next candle on the timeframe being studied must print before the pattern can be validated.
A hammer candlestick doesn’t necessarily mean a new uptrend will occur, only that a bounce higher is likely imminent.
Candlestick patterns can be used to indicate the future price direction of a stock. Candlestick patterns are especially useful for technical traders when they are combined with other indicators such as larger patterns, trading volume, relative strength index (RSI) and divergences between RSI and price action.
Tesla entered a downtrend on Sept. 15 after forming a bearish double top pattern at the $278.91 mark, when paired with similar price action on Sept. 12. The stock’s most recent lower high within the downtrend was formed on Wednesday at $273.93 and the most recent confirmed lower low was printed at the $261.20 mark the day prior.
Produced in association with Benzinga