TimelessMarket Theory
Trader Profile · The Market Wizards

Steve Nison

b. 1951 · Technical analyst, CMT; introduced Japanese candlestick charting to the West

The reason candlestick charts — now the default for most traders worldwide — crossed from Japan to the West, barely a generation ago.

CandlesticksTechnical analysisPrice patternsCMT
SN
Steve Nison, CMT · b. 1951

1 The Story

The man who brought candlesticks west

Steve Nison (born 1951) is an American technical analyst who earned an MBA in finance from Baruch College and worked as a senior technical analyst at major Wall Street firms. In the late 1980s he researched Japanese charting methods that were almost unknown outside Japan.1

He presented his findings in a 1989 article and then the 1991 book Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques, which introduced candlesticks to Western traders and quickly made them a standard chart type. He was among the early holders of the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) designation.2

2 The Big Idea

A candle shows the whole period's fight

The body and wicks reveal who won — at a glance, far faster than a bar.

Nison's contribution was to bring a centuries-old Japanese tool to the modern West: the candlestick, whose coloured body (open to close) and wicks (the high and low) let a trader read the balance of buyers and sellers instantly — and recognise patterns of reversal and continuation.1

3 The Method

Reading candlesticks

The single candle

Body = open-to-close; wicks = the high and low. Colour tells you who finished in control.

Reversal patterns

Shapes like the hammer, engulfing, and doji flag where momentum may be turning.

Continuation patterns

Other formations suggest a trend is pausing, not ending.

Context first

Candlesticks are most powerful read at meaningful levels and within the larger trend.

The candlestick Nison brought westHighCloseOpenLowone bar shows the whole period’s fight
The candlestick Nison popularised: a coloured body spanning the open and close, with wicks to the high and low — the whole period's auction in one mark.1

4 Try It Today

Test the idea for yourself

A no-risk exercise

Switch any chart to candlesticks and find a 'hammer' (a small body with a long lower wick) at the bottom of a decline. Ask what it shows: sellers pushed price down hard, but buyers slammed it back up by the close. Reading that story off a single candle is Nison's gift to Western traders.

5 The Books & Their Big Ideas

What they wrote — and what to take from it

Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques

Steve Nison · 1991
  • Brought candlesticks west — now the default chart worldwide.2
  • Reading single candles & patterns of reversal and continuation.1

6 Watch & Read

Go deeper

▶ Curated video embeds here
(YouTube embed, credited)

§ Sources

  1. "Steve Nison, CMT," CMT Association — cmtassociation.org
  2. "About Steve Nison," Candlecharts — candlecharts.com