Monday May 11, 2026 Stocks that formed a bearish harami candlestick pattern, indicating potential trend reversal or weakening bullish momentum seven days ago.

$DELL $TWLO $DOCN $ARES $TEM $FLY $KDP $WSC $TTD $GEO $RKT $AI $SOUN $BB
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Rank Ticker Price Volume Name
1 DELL 247.04 11,517,000 Dell Technologies Inc.
2 TWLO  ðŸš€ 198.59 1,981,200 Twilio Inc.
3 DOCN  ðŸ“ˆ 162.72 3,353,100 DigitalOcean Holdings, Inc.
4 ARES 124.61 3,767,300 Ares Management Corporation
5 TEM  ðŸ“ˆ 48.46 8,239,000 Tempus AI, Inc.
6 FLY 38.24 7,972,900 Firefly Aerospace Inc.
7 KDP 28.71 9,720,900 Keurig Dr Pepper Inc.
8 WSC 26.71 4,625,900 WillScot Holdings Corporation
9 TTD  ðŸš€ 21.52 21,721,400 The Trade Desk, Inc.
10 GEO  ðŸ“ˆ 21.41 1,748,800 Geo Group Inc (The) REIT
11 RKT 14.83 30,505,600 Rocket Companies, Inc.
12 AI  ðŸš€ 9.48 4,574,000 C3.ai, Inc.
13 SOUN  ðŸš€ ðŸ“ˆ 8.45 35,610,500 SoundHound AI, Inc.
14 BB  ðŸ“ˆ 6.22 27,888,300 BlackBerry Limited
What Is a Bearish Harami Candlestick?

A Bearish Harami is a two-bar Japanese candlestick pattern that signals a potential reversal of an uptrend to a downtrend. The name "harami" comes from the Japanese word for "pregnant," as the pattern visually resembles a pregnant woman. Here's the breakdown of what this pattern signifies:

  • First Candle: A large bullish (green or white) candle that shows strong buying pressure and a continuation of the existing uptrend.
  • Second Candle: A small bearish (red or black) candle that is completely "contained" or engulfed within the body of the first candle. The high and low of the second candle are within the open and close of the first.
The psychology behind the pattern suggests a shift in market sentiment. The first large bullish candle indicates that buyers are still in control. However, the second, small candle reveals a significant loss of bullish momentum. This hesitation from buyers and the emergence of sellers, albeit in a small range, can be a warning sign that the uptrend is running out of steam. Traders often look for this pattern at the top of an uptrend or near a resistance level. While the pattern itself is a reversal signal, it's generally considered more effective when confirmed by other indicators or a subsequent down day that breaks below the low of the harami pattern.

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