Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand

This article investigates the profitability of candlestick patterns. The holding periods are 1, 3, 5, and 10 days. Two exit strategies are studied. One is the Marshall–Young–Rose (MYR) exit strategy and the other is the Caginalp–Laurent (CL) exit strategy. The MYR applies a prespecified date to exit...

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Main Authors: Piyapas Tharavanij, Vasan Siraprapasiri, Kittichai Rajchamaha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-10-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017736799
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spelling doaj-230169f722c64e89ad4ebc38d827d23e2020-11-25T03:44:06ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402017-10-01710.1177/2158244017736799Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of ThailandPiyapas Tharavanij0Vasan Siraprapasiri1Kittichai Rajchamaha2College of Management (CMMU), Mahidol University, Bangkok, ThailandCollege of Management (CMMU), Mahidol University, Bangkok, ThailandCollege of Management (CMMU), Mahidol University, Bangkok, ThailandThis article investigates the profitability of candlestick patterns. The holding periods are 1, 3, 5, and 10 days. Two exit strategies are studied. One is the Marshall–Young–Rose (MYR) exit strategy and the other is the Caginalp–Laurent (CL) exit strategy. The MYR applies a prespecified date to exit the market. In contrast, the CL sets an exit price equal to an average holding period closing price, assuming that investors liquidate their positions evenly within this period. The daily data include open, high, low, and close prices of component stocks of the SET50 index (the 50 largest capitalization stocks in the Stock Exchange of Thailand [SET]) for a 10-year period from July 3, 2006, to June 30, 2016. This study tests the predictive power of bullish and bearish candlestick reversal patterns both without technical filtering and with technical filtering (Stochastics [%D], Relative Strength Index [RSI], Money Flow Index [MFI]) by applying the skewness adjusted t test and the binomial test. The statistical analysis finds little use of both bullish and bearish candlestick reversal patterns since the mean returns of most patterns are not statistically different from zero. Even the ones with statistically significant returns do have high risks in terms of standard deviations. The binomial test results also indicate that candlestick patterns cannot reliably predict market directions. In addition, this article finds that filtering by %D, RSI, or MFI generally does not increase profitability nor prediction accuracy of candlestick patterns.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017736799
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Piyapas Tharavanij
Vasan Siraprapasiri
Kittichai Rajchamaha
spellingShingle Piyapas Tharavanij
Vasan Siraprapasiri
Kittichai Rajchamaha
Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
SAGE Open
author_facet Piyapas Tharavanij
Vasan Siraprapasiri
Kittichai Rajchamaha
author_sort Piyapas Tharavanij
title Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
title_short Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
title_full Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
title_fullStr Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Profitability of Candlestick Charting Patterns in the Stock Exchange of Thailand
title_sort profitability of candlestick charting patterns in the stock exchange of thailand
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2017-10-01
description This article investigates the profitability of candlestick patterns. The holding periods are 1, 3, 5, and 10 days. Two exit strategies are studied. One is the Marshall–Young–Rose (MYR) exit strategy and the other is the Caginalp–Laurent (CL) exit strategy. The MYR applies a prespecified date to exit the market. In contrast, the CL sets an exit price equal to an average holding period closing price, assuming that investors liquidate their positions evenly within this period. The daily data include open, high, low, and close prices of component stocks of the SET50 index (the 50 largest capitalization stocks in the Stock Exchange of Thailand [SET]) for a 10-year period from July 3, 2006, to June 30, 2016. This study tests the predictive power of bullish and bearish candlestick reversal patterns both without technical filtering and with technical filtering (Stochastics [%D], Relative Strength Index [RSI], Money Flow Index [MFI]) by applying the skewness adjusted t test and the binomial test. The statistical analysis finds little use of both bullish and bearish candlestick reversal patterns since the mean returns of most patterns are not statistically different from zero. Even the ones with statistically significant returns do have high risks in terms of standard deviations. The binomial test results also indicate that candlestick patterns cannot reliably predict market directions. In addition, this article finds that filtering by %D, RSI, or MFI generally does not increase profitability nor prediction accuracy of candlestick patterns.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017736799
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