STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. The Traders' Magazine
Request Information
From Advertisers
Traders.com
Stocks &
Commodities

  • Subscribers' Area
  • Current Issue

  •    - Opening Position
       - Letters to S&C
       - Traders' Tips
       - Futures Liquidity
       - News & Products
       - Books
       - Cover Art

  • Free Articles
  • Article Abstracts
    1996-Present
  • Complete Articles
    1982-Present
  • Novice Traders' Notebook
  • Glossary
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Free Trial
  • Search
  • Working
    Money
    Traders.com
    Advantage
    Traders'
    Resource
    Online Store
    Message Boards
    Article Code
    Free Newsletter
    Products
    Search
    Help
    Subscribe
    Renew
    Contact Us
    Home

    Enter search terms:


    Products
    Small Book Image for Store.Traders.comStore.Traders.com
    Purchase past articles on hundreds of topics, along with software, books, and magazine subscriptions over a secure web connection. Click Here

     
    Search Products:

    @ Online Store!
    S&C Magazine Subscriber Login
    S&C Free Trial Issue
    S&C Volume Books
    S&C Magazine
    S&C on DVD
    Software
    Articles
    FREE ARTICLES! (while they last)
    The 21st-Century Technician
    Trading By Tape-Reading
    Suri Duddella Notes
    Elwave 9.0
    Bennett McDowell
    VisualTrader 4.0
    Forex Volatility Patterns
    Stock Trading Success
    Market Dynamics
    Bill And Justine Williams
    StrategyDesk
    Profiting From The Gartley
    Elwave 8
    Steve Nison's Profiting In ...
    High Growth Stock Investor
    Daytrading With TheStockBandit ...
    Support & Resistance ...
    eSignal 10 and Advanced GET ...
    Buying Straddles
    NeuroShell Trader 5
    GTS Pro
    Between Price And Volume
    Point & Figure for Forex
    Direct Pro
    A Window to Our Workshop
    Profitunity Home Study Course
    Adrienne Toghraie
    MultiCharts 2 (Part 2)
    MESA8
    MultiCharts 2 (Part 1)
    C. Kirk of TheKirkReport.com
    StrataSearch 3.0
    IBFX-GPS
    Traders' Resource
    Advisory Services
    Books
    Brokerage
    Consultants
    Courses & Seminars
    Data Services
    Exchanges
    Hardware
    Mutual Funds
    Online Trading Services
    Publications & Newsletters
    Software
    Trading Systems

    Information Directory
    S&C Tour
    S&C Magazine
    Resources
    Products
    Subscribe
    This Month's Issue
    Home | S&C Magazine | Working Money | Traders' Resource | Message-Boards | Store

    CLASSIC TECHNIQUES


    The Basics And Tactics Of A Western Classic
    High-Probability Point And Figure


    by Joe Demkovich


    If you want buy and sell signals from a charting system, point and figure charting may be for you.


    When you purchase stock in a company, you must make two decisions. The first: Which stock should I buy? (That's fundamental analysis.) The second: When should I buy it? (That's technical analysis.) The fundamental analyst is concerned with financial statements, company history, management, earnings, dividends, industry position, and product popularity. The technical analyst is concerned with supply and demand, accumulation, and distribution. Most stocks have substantial price moves at one time or another. Before a stock price goes up, it usually goes through a period of accumulation, and before the price goes down, it usually goes through a period of distribution. Point and figure (PNF) displays highlight this behavior.

    FIGURE 1: BASIC POINT AND FIGURE. The basic PNF chart of a rising price shows a column of Xs. A column of Os means the stock is falling. Columns of Xs and Os alternate back and forth; they never appear in the same column. Price must swing at least three points (or boxes) to reverse from one direction to the other.


    TIMING

    Assuming you are satisfied with the fundamentals of the company, you should buy the stock only when the market, the industry group, and the stock are in an uptrend. Conversely, you should sell when the market, the industry group, and the stock are in a downtrend.

    Many technical analysts primarily use charts to determine trends -- charts of the stock, the market, the industry group, or an index. There are four main types of charts: line, bar, candlestick, and point and figure. Point and figure is one of the oldest charting formats used to chart the markets.

    BASICS OF POINT AND FIGURE CHARTING

    The basic PNF chart (Figure 1) of a rising price shows a column of Xs. A column of Os means the stock is falling. Columns of Xs and Os alternate back and forth; they never appear in the same column. Price must swing at least three points (or boxes) to reverse from one direction to the other. For example, if a stock were trading upward in a column of Xs, each box being $1, with a top of $50, it would take a move to $47 (intraday or on close, your choice) to reverse the chart to Os. Going in the other direction, if a stock were trading downward in a column of Os, each box being $1, with a current low of $45, it would need a rally to $48 to reverse the stock to a column of Xs. (For a detailed explanation, see sidebar "Point and figure technique.")

    Each X or O represents a movement in the price of the stock. For prices below the $100 level, each X or O represents $1. For prices above the $100 level, each X or O represents $2. The size of the boxes is up to the analyst.

    PNF doesn't have a time axis the way most charts do, though many analysts make notes on the chart of the times that things occur. The basic chart is purely a measure of supply and demand.   ...Continued in the April 2001 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES


    Joe Demkovich is a retired IBM manager and has been teaching investing courses for several years. He is a partner in options investing with Gene Theriot. He may be contacted via e-mail at
    puggy@worldnet.att.net.

    Excerpted from an article originally published in the April 2001 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. All rights reserved. © Copyright 2001, Technical Analysis, Inc.



    Return to April 2001 Contents

    Technical Analysis, Inc.

    [Home | Working Money Magazine | S&C Magazine | Traders.com Advantage | Online Store]
    [Traders' Resource | Add a Product to Traders' Resource | Message Boards]
    [Subscribe/Renew | Free Trial Issue | Article Code | Search | Help Files]
    Departments: [Advertising | Editorial | Circulation | Employment | Contact Us]

    Copyright © 1996-2008 Technical Analysis, Inc. All rights reserved. Read our privacy statement.

    Technical Analysis, Inc.
    Subscribe! Free E-mail Newsletter.
    First: Last:
    E-mail: