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How to Read Stock Charts 2026: Essential Guide for Beginners

Stock charts are the language of technical analysis. Master 3 chart types, candlestick patterns, red-up/green-down rules, and key indicators (MA, MACD, RSI, volume) to read charts.

Algo Lab TeamPublished on 2026-05-10 08:00

Key Takeaways

Three basic chart types: 1) Line chart (simplest, shows closing price only); 2) Candlestick chart (shows open, high, low, close); 3) Volume chart (shows trading activity). Candlestick interpretation: Body (area between open and close), Wick (extension to high/low). Red = Close > Open (up), Green = Close < Open (down). Basic indicator intro: Moving averages for trends, MACD for momentum, RSI for overbought/oversold, Volume for confirmation.

Types of Stock Charts

Line Chart

The simplest chart type, showing only the closing price connected as a line:

  • Pros: Clean and clear, easy to spot the big trend at a glance
  • Cons: Does not show intraday fluctuations
  • Best for: Identifying long-term trends

Candlestick Chart

Displays four price points:

  • Open, Close, High, Low
  • Red (or white) = Close higher than Open (up)
  • Green (or black) = Close lower than Open (down)

One candlestick = one trading days price range. The longer the body, the larger the gain/loss; the longer the wick, the greater the intraday volatility.

Volume Chart

Shows daily trading volume (number of shares traded):

  • Usually displayed below the candlestick chart
  • Taller bars = higher volume
  • Used to confirm the validity of price trends

For more volume analysis, see Volume Confirmation of Patterns.


Basic Structure of Candlesticks

Two Parts of a Candlestick

PartDescription
BodyArea between open and close, reflects gain/loss magnitude
Upper WickLine from high to the top of the body
Lower WickLine from low to the bottom of the body

Two Colors of Candlesticks

ColorMeaning
Red (Bullish)Close > Open, up for the day
Green (Bearish)Close < Open, down for the day

Basic Technical Tools

Moving Averages

Averages of stock prices over a period, connected as a line:

  • 20-day: Short-term trend
  • 50-day: Medium-term trend
  • 200-day: Long-term trend (bull/bear boundary)

See Complete Guide to Moving Averages for more.

MACD

Used to identify trend changes:

  • MACD golden cross (crossing above the signal line from below) = Buy signal
  • MACD death cross (crossing below the signal line from above) = Sell signal

See MACD and RSI Combined for more.

RSI

Used to identify overbought/oversold conditions:

  • RSI > 70: Overbought (potentially too high)
  • RSI < 30: Oversold (potentially too low)

Volume

Confirms the validity of price trends:

  • Price up + Volume increasing = Healthy
  • Price up + Volume decreasing = Warning

Common Beginner Mistakes

Mistake 1: Using Too Many Indicators

Filling the chart with various indicators makes it harder to read. Beginners should start with just moving averages + volume. Visit our Tutorial Center for complete step-by-step guides.

Mistake 2: Only Looking at Short Timeframes

Looking only at 1-minute or 5-minute charts ignores the bigger trend. Start with daily charts, then check weekly charts.

Mistake 3: Overinterpreting a Single Candlestick

A single candlestick has limited meaning. Look at a series of consecutive candlesticks to identify trends and patterns.


Summary

Chart reading basics:

  1. Start with daily charts to see the big trend
  2. Moving averages are the most basic tool
  3. Volume is key to confirming signals
  4. Dont overload with indicators

Start simple and learn step by step. Ready to apply technical analysis in practice? Explore our Strategy Center. See also Technical Analysis Fundamentals and Trend Line Drawing Guide.

#Chart Reading#Stock Charts

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