Hi all,
I am currently studying chart patterns and was hoping you could answer a very specific question that I can't seem to find addressed anywhere. I keep coming across what appear to be flash crashes (similar to The Flash Crash) on candlestick charts, where the wick can either shoot way above or below the lifetime range of an instrument. Some can even go all the way down to nearly touch 0 from hundreds of $ or £ / share. I see it on very large and highly traded instruments, not just the small and illiquid ones. Can anyone offer the reason(s) why this happens?
Many thanks in advance.
I am currently studying chart patterns and was hoping you could answer a very specific question that I can't seem to find addressed anywhere. I keep coming across what appear to be flash crashes (similar to The Flash Crash) on candlestick charts, where the wick can either shoot way above or below the lifetime range of an instrument. Some can even go all the way down to nearly touch 0 from hundreds of $ or £ / share. I see it on very large and highly traded instruments, not just the small and illiquid ones. Can anyone offer the reason(s) why this happens?
Many thanks in advance.