May 2005Trading Tip:
Volume Summation Indicator with Exhaustion
Alert by Ana Maria Gallo
Aside from price itself, volume represents the commitment of
traders to take a position. Richard Wyckoff referred to volume
as the "cause" and price the "effect", indicating that to him,
volume leads price. Over time many indicators have been
created to gauge volume strength: Accumulation Distribution,
Chaikin Oscillator, Money Flow Index, On Balance Volume, and simple
moving averages or rate of change indicators on volume. All
have their uses and are worthy of study by the student of volume.
While time is often on the side of a swing or position trader,
who can evaluate volume directly or through comparison using such
indicators? The day-trader needs a quick, intuitive, and
preferably, visual confirmation that the tide has likely
turned. Fast markets need rapid decisions and during the
torpor of a slow market, small clues help alert the trader to "pay
attention". Momentum bars using tick are particularly useful
to day traders as they reflect price speed. Unfortunately, as
for minute based bars, volume for tick bars is also flat looking and
difficult to quickly read.
To this end, the VolSum indicator was created to provide a quick
visual look at volume behavior relative to price that might
otherwise be lost. This indicator is also useful on intra-day
minute charts, and perhaps surprisingly on constant volume
charts. A suggested user-modification for the later is to
alternatively experiment using Tick Count rather than Volume.
This can be done by a small change on the VolSum DYO.
VolSum: Volume Summation
The Volume Sum DYO tallies of volume for a run of UP (or DOWN)
bars, draws a histogram of the running total, and resets itself to
zero when the run completes. Doji bars (i.e. Close=Open) are
counted as part of the run in progress. This means there will
be places where the histograms overlaps. This is reasonable as
a Doji indicates indecision and the price pressure volume represents
could flow either way. Note too that a value axis is not
shown. This is by intent, as the relative values and shapes
are what are, in my opinion, of best use in this tool.
However, when used on larger intraday time frames (e.g. 15-minute),
the peak VolSum bars can be used to gauge potential "balance" volume
required to absorb the prior buying or selling spree.
VShift: Volume Shift Alert
One of the most pleasant aspects of the http://www.dacharts.com/ trading
community is the sharing of ideas, charts, and, of course,
templates. "Tricky", a fellow trader in the dacharts.com
community, wrote a group of indicators that highlight a bar when
VolSum indicates there is a high odds of price exhaustion. This
alert is shown in the examples and is included in the template
below.
For those who have long used simple moving averages of volume, I
present an indicator I call VShift, which is a simple spread of two
volume moving averages, the shift from below zero to above zero
indicating a momentum change and marked by a small blue dot at the
bottom of the chart.
Examples:
The VolSum, VShift, and Price Exhaustion alerts have all been
collected on one template for Ensign Windows users. Use the
Internet Services form to download the VolSumVshift template from
the Ensign web site.
The following charts, a 532-tick and a 3-minute bar chart,
show how the indicators might be interpreted.
Trading Tip:
Gartley Pattern by
Howard Arrington
One of the formations that Larry Pesavento looks for is the
Gartley pattern, which is named after H. M. Gartley who wrote
'Profits in the Stock Market' in 1935. The following
chart shows a Gartley Sell formation.
The market has had a sizeable move up to put in a top
at point X, which is now considered a potential turning
point. The Gartley pattern is one with an initial
correction to point A, and then a 3 wave retest back towards the
turn at point X. The 3 waves back up are labeled in the
example as B-C-D. There should be symmetry in the retrace,
namely A-B equals C-D. Point D should be around 0.618 of the
X-A distance. The example shows point D at the 0.707 retrace
distance. The principle is to sell point D with a protective
stop above point X.
Keep in mind you do not initially pick X as the
top. You wait for selling to move the market to point A, and
then sell on the retracement approach back to X, looking for a three
wave retracement pattern that fulfills a 0.618 retracement distance.
The inverse pattern at potential bottoms would be the
Gartley Buy formation. Buy the retest approach to the bottom
turn at the 0.618 retrace level, with a protective stop below the
bottom turn price. The next example shows a very nice move up
after the Gartley Buy formation.
The Gartley formation is easily marked using the
Gartley / Butterfly draw tool in Ensign Windows. Here is
the property form for this tool.
The pattern is marked by clicking the left mouse
button down at point X, drag to point A, release the mouse and click
on point D. The tool will automatically find points B and C
between points A and D, and draw the lines as shown, fill the two
triangle interiors with a shade color, and label the retracement
percentages. The tool could also show extensions of the C-D
leg, or reactions from point D to create a D-E line that is parallel
to the x-A line. |