Pennant Chart Pattern: A Guide to Continuation Signals in Technical Analysis What is a pennant? A pennant is a short-term continuation pattern that appears after a strong price move (the "flagpole"). It consists of a brief consolidation with converging trendlines that form a small symmetrical triangle, typically lasting about one to three weeks. Traders watch for a breakout in the direction of the original move, ideally confirmed by rising volume. Key characteristics
* Flagpole: the sharp price move preceding consolidation.
* Converging trendlines: price swings narrow into a small triangle.
* Volume pattern: heavy volume on the flagpole, declining volume during consolidation, and a volume spike at the breakout.
* Time frame: usually a few days to a few weeks.
How to identify and trade a pennant
1. Confirm the prior trend: ensure a clear, sharp move produced the flagpole.
2. Draw trendlines: connect highs and lows during consolidation to form a small symmetrical triangle.
3. Look for volume confirmation: declining volume through the pennant, then increased volume at breakout.
4. Entry:
5. Bullish pennant β€” place an entry (market or limit) just above the upper trendline.
6. Bearish pennant β€” place an entry just below the lower trendline.
7. Price target: measure the height of the flagpole and add it to the breakout point (for bullish) or subtract it from the breakout point (for bearish).
8. Example: a stock rallies from $5 to $10 (flagpole = $5), consolidates, and breaks out at $9 β†’ target β‰ˆ $9 + $5 = $14.
9. Stop-loss: commonly placed just inside the pennant at its lowest (bullish) or highest (bearish) point; position sizing should reflect risk tolerance.
Common confirmations and filters
* Volume spike at breakout.
* Momentum indicators (e.g., RSI, MACD) turning in the breakout direction.
* Breakout above/below nearby support or resistance levels.
* Avoid trading solely on the pennantβ€”use multiple confirmations.
Why pennants fail
* Low or absent breakout volume β€” weak participation increases false-breakout risk.
* Early entries during consolidation β€” entering before confirmation can lead to losses if the breakout reverses.
* External events β€” news, earnings, or macro shocks can invalidate the pattern.
* Ignoring broader market context β€” market-wide trends can overpower single-stock patterns.
Psychology behind the pattern A pennant reflects a temporary equilibrium between buyers and sellers after a strong move. Traders pause, reassess, and reduce activity (lower volume) during consolidation. When one side regains conviction, the breakout resumes the prior trend. Explore More Resources

Pennant vs. flag
* Pennant: converging trendlines that form a small symmetrical triangle; typically lower volatility inside the pattern.
* Flag: roughly rectangular channel with parallel trendlines that slope against the prevailing trend.
Both are continuation patterns, but the shape and internal price action differβ€”use the geometry to distinguish them.
Bullish vs. bearish pennants
* Bullish pennant: follows an uptrend and signals likely continuation upward after breakout.
* Bearish pennant: follows a downtrend and signals likely continuation downward after breakdown.
Risks and best practices
* Wait for confirmation (volume, momentum) before entering.
* Set defined stop-loss orders and manage position size.
* Consider broader market events and news risk.
* Combine pennants with other technical tools rather than relying on them alone.
Bottom line Pennants are reliable short-term continuation patterns when identified and confirmed correctly. Look for a clear flagpole, converging trendlines, declining consolidation volume, and a breakout with rising volume. Use measured targets, strict risk management, and additional indicators to reduce false signals.