He even framed a print of Shinchan doing the “Shooting Star” pose above his new home trading desk. Underneath, a plaque read: “False breakout. Get back up.”

By the end of the week, he was a convert. The “Double Bottom” was Shinchan being scolded by his mother, then immediately doing the same thing again. The “Rising Wedge” was Shinchan trying to climb a wall to peek into the neighbor’s yard—tightening, straining, then collapsing.

Arjun was laughing so hard he nearly spilled his coffee. But here was the terrifying thing: he started to get it.

He kept watching. The “Bullish Engulfing” pattern was demonstrated by Shinchan performing his infamous “Action Kamen” pose—chest puffed, fists on hips, legs wide, ready to leap forward and conquer.

A crude, hand-drawn animation popped up. It was Shinchan Nohara—the rude, mischievous five-year-old from the anime. Shinchan was standing with his legs wide, one arm drooping, his head tilted back in exaggerated despair. The caption read: “Hammer Pattern: Long lower wick, small body at the top. Shinchan’s ‘Denied Chocolate’ slump.”