Wednesday July 23, 2025 Stocks where bullish harami candlestick patterns have formed - classic reversal signals after a downtrend, hinting at upside momentum as of twelve days ago. $NVDA $TQQQ $NOK $QQQ $ACHR $MU $QUBT $IONQ $NVDL $CRCL $META $RCAT $NBIS $DELL

Check scan results for prior days 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - + Export Tickers
← Previous: A bullish candle followed by a bearish candle that is an inside day A bearish candle followed by a bullish candle that is an inside day Next: Two consecutive bearish candles with the second candle being an inside day →
Rank Ticker Price Volume
1 NVDA 170.78 154,082,200
2 TQQQ 87.84 59,012,600
3 NOK ðŸš€ 4.52 41,256,000
4 QQQ 563.81 40,215,300
5 ACHR ðŸš€ 11.36 39,701,500
6 MU 109.83 17,810,000
7 QUBT ðŸš€ 17.47 15,793,900
8 IONQ ðŸš€ 43.28 14,455,100
9 NVDL ðŸš€ 81.45 10,451,000
10 CRCL ðŸš€ 202.41 10,319,800
11 META 713.58 8,771,600
12 RCAT ðŸš€ 9.56 8,451,100
13 NBIS ðŸš€ 51.88 7,288,500
14 DELL 127.22 4,175,700
15 APP 362.12 3,626,100
16 ARM ðŸš€ 159.28 3,398,600
17 CVNA 343.00 3,224,300
18 HWM 186.40 2,769,800
19 AS 37.73 2,565,800
20 ROKU 90.25 2,451,800
21 RBRK 84.84 2,158,700
22 NTAP 105.88 2,082,900
What Is a Bullish Harami Candlestick?

A bullish harami is a two-candlestick pattern used in technical analysis to signal a potential reversal from a downtrend to an uptrend. The name "harami" is a Japanese word for "pregnant," which visually describes the pattern. The pattern is formed by two consecutive candles. The first is a large bearish (red or black) candle, which indicates that sellers are still in control and the downtrend is continuing. The second candle is a smaller, bullish (green or white) candle that forms completely within the body of the first candle. This smaller candle suggests that the selling pressure has weakened, and a balance is being reached between buyers and sellers. The fact that the price could not close lower than the previous day, and instead opened and closed higher within its range, is a key sign of indecision and a potential shift in momentum. Traders often view the bullish harami as an early warning that a reversal may be on the horizon. However, it is not a standalone signal. Many traders wait for confirmation from a third candle that continues the bullish movement or a break above a key resistance level. Combining the bullish harami with other technical indicators, such as the Relative Strength Index (RSI) or MACD, can help increase the reliability of the signal and confirm a potential trend change.