Bearish Modified Hikkake
The Bearish Modified Hikkake is a multi-candle formation that begins with an inside bar setup, followed by a false bullish breakout, and then a reversal back into the bearish trend. It highlights how short-term buyer enthusiasm gets trapped before sellers reassert dominance.

Candle Formation Breakdown
- First Candle: A small candle contained within the range of the prior candle (inside bar).
- Second Candle: Another small candle that continues the consolidation.
- Third Candle: A bullish breakout candle that closes above the inside bar range, suggesting buyers are taking control.
- Fourth Candle (and beyond): Price reverses downward, closing below the inside bar’s low, confirming the bearish continuation.
Key Traits to Recognize
- Appears during a downtrend.
- The false breakout traps buyers, creating a “failed rally.”
- The subsequent bearish close confirms continuation of the downtrend.
- Stronger when confirmed by high trading volume during the reversal.
Market Psychology Behind the Pattern
- Sellers dominate the trend, but consolidation creates uncertainty.
- A bullish breakout tempts buyers, suggesting reversal.
- The breakout fails quickly, trapping long positions.
- Sellers return aggressively, driving prices lower and resuming the downtrend.
Limitations to Keep in Mind
- The Bearish Modified Hikkake requires precise candle structure and may be rare.
- False signals are possible if the breakout sustains instead of failing.
- Should be combined with other indicators (RSI, MACD, moving averages) for stronger confirmation.
Final Thoughts
The Bearish Modified Hikkake candlestick pattern is a clever bearish continuation signal that exploits false breakouts. Recognizing it helps traders avoid traps and stay aligned with the dominant downtrend.