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Foundation12–18 minLesson 3Forex Basics

Reading the market — candles, time, sessions

How professionals read a chart in the same way for two centuries — and why the time of day matters more than most beginners realise.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-20

Choose your reading depth — content adapts, URL stays the same.
Quick answer
A candlestick chart compresses every price tick in a period into a single picture: the open, high, low, and close (OHLC). Candles invented in 18th-century Japan still dominate every modern trading screen because they pack four numbers and a direction into one glance. Sessions matter because liquidity isn't constant across the 24-hour cycle — Sydney, Tokyo, London, and New York take turns running the market, and the four-hour overlap between London and New York carries the deepest liquidity (and the cleanest moves) of the day.
Outcome of this lesson
By the end of this lesson you will be able to read the OHLC of any candle, choose between M5/M15/H1/H4 timeframes for a given task, and tell which sessions are open at any moment.
TL;DR — 60 sec

Reading the market in 90 seconds

A candle = 4 numbers (Open, High, Low, Close) on one rectangle. Timeframes pick the period. Sessions pick the audience.

  • Each candle has a body (Open → Close) and two wicks (High, Low). Green/bull: close > open. Red/bear: close < open.
  • Timeframes are just zoom levels: M5 = one candle per 5 min, H1 = one per hour, D1 = one per day. The picture is the same; the granularity changes.
  • FX runs in four overlapping shifts: Sydney → Tokyo → London → New York. The London/New York overlap (13:00–17:00 UTC) carries ~70 % of daily volume.
  • Spread tightens when London opens and again when New York joins. Spread widens around Asia-only hours and weekends.
  • Sessions matter because the same chart looks different at different hours. A breakout into a thin Asia session ≠ a breakout into a London open.
2024-08-05
Yen carry-trade unwind triggers global selloff

Here is what 'sessions matter' looked like on August 5, 2024:

USDJPY shed ~12 yen in the Asian session and dragged equities with it — sessions matter, and so does crowding.

Source
Standard lesson body

Anatomy of a candle

Drag the open, high, low, close handles to see how the candle changes. Below: five real candles — which is bullish, bearish, or indecisive?

High 108.00Low 96.00Open 100.00Close 106.00
Open: 100.00
High: 108.00
Low: 96.00
Close: 106.00

Bullish — close above open

Read each candle. Click to reveal the verdict.

What you're actually looking at

A candle is four numbers in one rectangle

Candlestick charts were invented by Japanese rice traders in the 1700s. They have not been improved upon — three centuries later, every Bloomberg terminal, every MT5 chart, every TradingView panel still shows the same shape, for the same reason: a candle packs the four numbers a trader needs (Open, High, Low, Close) into a visual that a human brain reads in milliseconds.

The body is a rectangle stretched from the Open to the Close. The top wick (or 'shadow') marks the High; the bottom wick marks the Low. A green (or hollow) body means the price closed higher than it opened. A red (or filled) body means it closed lower. The wicks tell you how much further price *tried* to go before pulling back.

Reading one EURUSD H1 candle: Open 1.0870, High 1.0892, Low 1.0865, Close 1.0888. The body stretches from 1.0870 to 1.0888 and is green (close > open). A short bottom wick reaches down to 1.0865 (the seller pushed there and got rejected). A small upper wick from 1.0888 to 1.0892 (the buyer pushed there and gave a little back). One hour of price action, four numbers, one picture.

Timeframes — same data, different zoom

M5, H1, D1, W1 — these are just zoom levels on the same chart. M5 means each candle compresses 5 minutes of price into one shape; H1 means each candle is one hour; D1, one day; W1, one week. The data underneath is identical — only how it's grouped changes.

Why this matters: a 'flat range' on H1 might be a perfectly clean uptrend on M5, or a brief consolidation in a much larger D1 downtrend. Professionals look at multiple timeframes to avoid getting fooled by zoom-level optical illusions. A common habit: scan the higher timeframe (H4 or D1) for direction, then drop to a lower one (M15 or H1) to time entries. We'll get to timing in later lessons; for now, just internalise that the timeframe is a choice, not a fact.

Sessions — when the audience is awake

Forex trades 24 hours a day on weekdays because someone, somewhere, is always at a desk. As Sydney winds down, Tokyo opens. As Tokyo closes, London opens. As London winds down, New York opens. As New York closes, Sydney reopens. Four overlapping shifts, one continuous market.

The hours in UTC (slightly approximate — exact opens shift with daylight savings): Sydney 21:00–06:00, Tokyo 00:00–09:00, London 07:00–16:00, New York 12:00–21:00. The four-hour overlap between London and New York (13:00–17:00 UTC) is the loudest window of the day. Most of the world's institutional FX flow times itself for that window, and it shows up on every chart as the tightest spreads, deepest order books, and cleanest moves.

What this means in practice: if you trade EURUSD, GBPUSD, EURGBP, you'll generally see the most actionable price action in London + NY overlap. If you trade USDJPY, AUDUSD, NZDUSD, you'll also see action in the Asian session. The same chart at 22:00 UTC on a Friday and 14:00 UTC on a Tuesday will *look* different — because the audience is different.

Key terms

Definition
Candlestick
A visual representation of price action over a fixed period, encoding the Open, High, Low, and Close into a rectangle (body) and two lines (wicks). Invented in 18th-century Japan; the global standard ever since.
Definition
OHLC
Open, High, Low, Close — the four numbers that summarise any chart period. Every modern chart format (candlestick, bar, OHLC bar) is a visual encoding of these four values.
Definition
Timeframe
The period of time each candle compresses. M5 = 5 minutes per candle, M15 = 15 minutes, H1 = 1 hour, H4 = 4 hours, D1 = 1 day. Lower timeframe = more granularity + more noise; higher = smoother + slower.
Definition
Trading session
A named window in the 24-hour FX cycle, anchored to one major financial centre's working day: Sydney, Tokyo, London, New York. Sessions overlap; the London + New York overlap (about 13:00–17:00 UTC) is the most liquid window of the day.
Definition
Liquidity
The ease with which you can transact a given size without moving the price. High liquidity = tight spread, fast fills, low slippage. London + NY overlap = high liquidity. Friday evening + weekend = low liquidity (and wider spreads).

Timeframes — picking your zoom level

Every chart is the same data; the timeframe is just how much time one candle compresses. Pick the one that matches what you're trying to see.

M1 / M5
1 / 5 minutes per candle

Granular intraday context, scalping setups, exact entry timing.

Scalpers, news traders, anyone watching a fill closely.

M15 / M30
15 / 30 minutes per candle

Balanced day-trader view. Many beginners practise on these.

Day traders, intraday breakout traders.

H1 / H4
1 / 4 hours per candle

The 'working chart' for most retail traders. Trends are visible, noise is filtered.

Swing traders, position-sizers, most algo strategies in this course.

D1 / W1
1 day / 1 week per candle

Trend direction, macro structure, long horizons. One D1 candle is a whole trading day.

Position traders, macro investors, any 'higher timeframe for direction' habit.

Sessions clock (UTC)

Where is the market awake right now? The bars below show the four major FX sessions on a 24-hour UTC dial.

00040812162024
Sydney
—
Tokyo
—
London
—
New York
—

UTC · Overlap with another session = deeper liquidity

Sydney
21:00–06:00 UTC

Smallest of the four. Opens the week on Sunday evening UTC.

Tokyo
00:00–09:00 UTC

Asian liquidity centre. Best window for JPY pairs.

London
07:00–16:00 UTC

Largest FX centre by volume. EURUSD, GBPUSD, EURGBP wake up here.

New York
12:00–21:00 UTC

Second largest. Overlaps with London for ~4 hours — the loudest window of the day.

Why sessions matter — Aug 5, 2024 in one chart

2024-08-05
Yen carry-trade unwind triggers global selloff

On Monday August 5th, 2024, the chart of USDJPY made textbook history. Watch what time it happened.

USDJPY shed ~12 yen in the Asian session and dragged equities with it — sessions matter, and so does crowding.

If you'd been looking only at the New York session that morning, you would have seen a sharp drop that 'came from nowhere'. The move actually originated in the Tokyo session over the weekend — equity-index futures unwinding the yen carry trade, with cascading margin calls hitting Asian funds. By the time NY opened, the largest part of the move had already happened. Same chart, very different stories depending on the session you watched. This is why professionals always know what session they're in.

Source

Practice — read three candles, find one session

10-minute practice — three candles, one session

Open your MT5 demo. Two tiny exercises that build the muscle memory you'll use every day from here.

  1. 1

    Set the EURUSD chart to H1 (Hourly). Scroll back to last Tuesday around 13:00 UTC (right when London + NY overlap began). Click any single candle. MT5 shows the OHLC numbers in a tooltip — read them out loud.

  2. 2

    Find three candles in a row: one green, one red, one with a long upper wick. Just naming them is the practice — you're training your eye to see structure, not predict the future.

  3. 3

    Now switch to M5 on the same time window. Same data, but you now see ~12 candles for each H1 candle. Notice how a 'clean' H1 candle is usually a messy story on M5 — small consolidations, retracements, small fakeouts. The H1 view averages all of that into one shape.

  4. 4

    Open the sessions widget on this page. Right now, what session(s) are open? If you're reading this during London + NY overlap, you should expect tighter spreads on EURUSD than during Asia-only hours.

Get used to looking at the clock
From this lesson on, when you open a chart, ask yourself two questions: what timeframe is this, and which session is currently in charge of the move? It takes a few days to develop the reflex. Once you have it, you stop being surprised by 'random' volatility — most of the time it just means the audience changed.
How AI Signals handles this

Manual: watch one chart for ten minutes a day, on the same pair, at the same time. Pattern recognition is unsexy and unavoidable — there is no shortcut.

Our reference: later in the course you'll meet AI Signals — software that watches dozens of charts at once and flags structures it has been trained to recognise. It does the boring part faster than a human can. But it cannot replace the foundation you're building right now, which is your own eye for what a 'normal' candle on H1 looks like.

When manual wins: for the first 50–100 hours on a chart. Until you've internalised what normal price action looks like, no AI tool will be intelligible to you — you won't know what it's flagging or whether to trust it.

Public-API live forex signal stream (WS + REST).
See AI Signals feed →

Mastery check

Five questions on candles, timeframes, and sessions. Pass at 4 of 5.

Reading the market — quick check

Test your understanding with 5 questions. Pass with 4/5 correct.

Reflect

Reflection

Type your honest answers — saved on this device only. Use them next week to spot patterns in your trading thinking.

Pro deep dive

Pro deep dive — what's under the candle

If you came in already comfortable reading a chart, here's what's actually underneath those candles.

Tick aggregation — what 'a candle' actually is

Every candle is a compression of many individual ticks. Your broker receives upstream ticks (price changes) typically at 1–10 Hz on majors during active sessions, and writes them into MT5's internal price database. When you set the chart to H1, MT5 aggregates every tick within that hour into one candle — Open = first tick of the hour, High = max tick, Low = min tick, Close = last tick. Two consequences: (1) different brokers can show slightly different candles because their tick feeds differ; (2) weekend gaps appear because no ticks were generated between Friday close and Sunday open. The 'gap' is just the absence of data, not a market event.

Why the London / New York overlap is loud

FX dealing desks at major banks are concentrated in London, New York, Tokyo, and Singapore. Each desk's working day is 7–9 hours. When London and New York are both open, you have two of the three deepest dealing centres simultaneously active, which means: more liquidity providers quoting, tighter spreads, more genuine interest at each price level, and faster order flow. By contrast, during Asia-only hours, Tokyo + Singapore have to handle global flow alone — the order book is thinner, spreads widen, and moves can be jumpier because each transaction relatively moves the price more.

Daylight savings — the subtle disruptor

Sessions are anchored to local working hours, but local clocks shift twice a year (March/November in Europe and the US, opposite times in Australia). For about three weeks each year, London and New York are 'misaligned' with the rest of the world — the overlap window shifts by an hour relative to UTC. This shows up subtly: volatility windows on a chart don't match their usual UTC hours. Most professionals account for it implicitly; if you're systematic, you should hard-code the UTC times of London and NY open and let your model handle the local-clock drift.

Bibliography

  • Nison — Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques (book reference)
  • BIS — Triennial Central Bank Survey, FX section (2022)
  • MetaQuotes — MT5 chart and timeframe documentation
  • Investing.com — economic calendar (session-aware)
Recall card — review in 1 week
In one paragraph: what are the four numbers a candlestick encodes, and what makes the London/NY overlap so liquid?
Show answer

A candlestick encodes Open, High, Low, and Close — the four prices that summarise one period of trading. The body stretches from Open to Close (green if Close > Open, red otherwise), and the wicks reach to the High above and the Low below. The London/NY overlap (about 13:00–17:00 UTC) is the most liquid window because the two largest FX dealing centres on Earth are simultaneously open — more liquidity providers, tighter spreads, deeper order books, cleaner moves. Outside that window the same chart can move very differently.

Next: Speaking in orders — buy, sell, stop, take

Educational material only — not investment advice. Trading carries risk of capital loss. Always practice on demo and use a stop-loss. ← Back to Forex Basics