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Reasons to use P
E N D
1. Jeremy du Plessis CMT, FSTAHead of Technical Analysis, Updata plc www.updata.co.uk
2. Reasons to use P&F Charts ‘Voice of the Market’
Only move when market moves
Unambiguous signals
Objective trend definition
Multiple time horizons from same data
Objective price targets & risk-reward ratios
Better for Relative Strength analysis
Ideal for scanning of stock universes
3. Point and Figure Chart
4. What is a Point & Figure chart? Typically (not always) constructed with Xs and Os
Xs represent up movements
Os represent down movements
Price is scaled on the vertical Y-axis
No time scale along the horizontal X-axis
Time not part of construction or analysis
X and O represents a price interval - Box Size
Price changes below the box size are ignored
Column changes determined by Reversal Size
5. Where did they come from? Started off as a price recording mechanism
and became a charting method
How?
6. Where did they come from? 19th Century Floor traders wrote prices down
as stock traded
(including fractions)
8 9½ 11¼ 12 12½ 13¾ 15 15½ 16 16½ 15 13¾ 12
11¼ 14¾ 15¼ 16 17½ 19¾ 20 21¼ 19½ 18¾ 19
7. Where did they come from? But realised that fractions didn’t add anything.
So removed fractions
8 9 11 12 12 13 15 15 16 16 15 13 12 10 10 11 11 14
15 16 17 19 20 21 19 18 19 20 20 21 23
First tenet of Point and Figure established
8. Where did they come from? After a Busy Trading Day
8 9 11 12 12 13 15 15 16 16 15 13 12 10 10 11 11 14 15 16, 17
19 20 21 19 18 19 20 20 21 23 21 22 23 22 20 19 18 17
18 19 19 18 19 19 20 21 22 23 21 22 20 21 19 18 17 16 18
17 16 18 19 19 18 17 18 19 19 20 21 21 22 22 21 21 22 23
18 19 19 18 19 19 20 21 22 23 21 22 20 21 19 18 17 16 18
18 19 19 18 19 19 20 21 22 23 21 22 20 21 19 18 17 16 18
Difficult to make any sense
9. Where did they come from? Realised columns would be easier and more informative
16
15
14 14
13 13 13
12 12 12
11 11 11
10 10
9
8
10. Where did they come from? Started to notice patterns in the data
11. Where did they come from? Price record becomes a Figure Chart
12. Where did they come from? Figure chart becomes a Point Chart
13. Where did they come from? Traders referred to their
point charts and their figure charts
as their….
Point and Figure charts!
And so Point and Figure was born
14. Where did they come from? Modern Point and Figure chart
15. Column Reversals
1-box – original method
3-box – most popular
Data required
Tick – plot each price – original method
Too much data for longer term analysis
Daily - using Close or High/Low
Ideal for longer-term analysis
Intraday – using 60min, 1min close or high/low
Ideal for shorter-term Various Construction Methods
16. Unambiguous Signals All 3-box P&F signals based on
Double-top and double-bottom break
(1-box patterns are more complex)
The wider the pattern the stronger it is
17. Unambiguous Signals
Triple-top and triple-bottom break
18. Unambiguous Signals Signals are unambiguous….
BUT not every signal should be taken
Signals put you in the right frame of mind
Point and Figure analysts
Look left for Support or Resistance
Look left to see if it is part of a bigger pattern
Look for common Point and Figure patterns
Use the Trend lines to confirm or reject signals
19. Point and Figure Trend lines Trend lines vital for Point and Figure analysis
Two ways to draw Trendlines:
Subjective
Lines can placed subjectively to show trend
Objective – advantage of Point and Figure charts
Lines drawn at 45° from tops and bottoms
45° = one box up/down, one column across
Defines bull and bear trends
20. 45° Trend Lines – Nasdaq
21. 45° Trend Lines – Nikkei 225
22. 45° Trend Lines – S&P500
23. 45° Trend Lines – FTSE 100
24. 45° Trend Lines – FTSE 100
25. Add Subjective Trend Lines ?
26. Or better to add 45° Internals
27. Trends & Internals - DJ Stoxx
28. Trends & Internals on Oil
29. Trends & Internals EURO
30. Advantages of 45° Trend Lines Can be drawn immediately after top/bottom
Objective - can’t argue with them
They alternate and carve up the chart
Easy to see bullish and bearish sections
Add dimension to the chart
Help accept or reject Point & Figure signals
Can see the trend easily
31. Uptrend or Downtrend?
32. Are you sure?
33. Point and Figure Scaling In Point and Figure terms:
Arithmetic: Fixed points box size
Log: Percentage Box Size
34. Arithmetic Chart - Vodafone
35. Log Scale Chart - Vodafone
36. Log or Arithmetic? Log better:-
For medium and long-term analysis
Where large rise and fall
Where rise has been exponential
Arithmetic better:-
For linear price rises
For charts in a price range (e.g. Bonds)
Essential for intraday charts especially tick charts
Essential for Forex
37. Multiple Time Horizons Changing the Box Size changes the Sensitivity
Changing Sensitivity changes the Time Horizon
Obtain Short, Medium and Long-term view from same data
Log scale % boxes ideal for this
38. 2% Box = Long-term View
39. 1% Box = Medium-term View
40. 0.5% Box = Short-term View
41. EURO Daily - 100pip
42. EURUSD Daily - 50pip
43. EURUSD Daily - 25pip
44. EURUSD Daily - 10pip
45. EURUSD Hourly – 10pip
46. Objective Price Targets Unambiguous way to obtain targets
Two Methods:
Vertical Count - based on thrust off low or high
Horizontal Count - based on pattern width
Unambiguous does not imply accuracy
Targets and trends go together
Achieved and unachieved targets tell you
Trend strength/weakness
Warn of trend deterioration
47. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
48. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
49. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
50. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
51. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
52. Vertical Targets - NASDAQ
53. Vertical & Horizontal - S&P 500
54. Vertical & Horizontal - S&P 500
55. Vertical & Horizontal - S&P 500
56. Vertical Targets– Cable 100pip
57. Vertical & Horizontal – Oil
58. Objective Risk-Reward Ratios Point and Figure gives you:
Reward = Target – entry price
and
Risk = entry price – exit price
Risk-Reward ratio = Reward / Risk
Helps you decide
Whether to take the trade
What Stop level to use
Either: Point and Figure signal as Stop
Or: % Trailing Stop
59. Risk-reward ratio at signal
60. Risk-reward ratio after signal
61. Risk-reward at triple-top signal
62. Risk-reward ratio - new target
63. Risk-reward ratios NOW
64. Risk-reward ratio at Signal
65. Risk-reward ratio NOW
66. Better Relative Strength charts
67. What is Relative Strength? Ratio chart
Usually share price divided by index
Best to Normalise the Ratio
How? Why? What’s the Advantage?
Rising chart = share outperforming
Falling chart = share underperforming
Essential for good fund management
Buy/hold outperformers
Sell underperformers
68. Why P&F of Relative Strength? Same advantages as price charts
Clear signals
Objective trend lines
Objective targets
69. R/S HSBC / UKX
70. R/S Maersk / SXXP in Euros
71. R/S UBS / SXXP in Euros
72. R/S BMW / SXXP
73. Clear-cut signals make Point & Figure ideal for scanning
Scan your universe of stocks:
P&F buy signals and/or P&F sell signals
and Risk Reward ratio greater than 2.5
and Trend is up/down
Best to use two time horizons 1% & 0.5%
Add Relative Strength with same box sizes Ideal for finding Opportunities
74. So what should you do now?
75. Start using Point and Figure in your analysis
Include a P&F chart in your report
Log or Arithmetic depending on the term
Consider drawing them with Xs only
Add 45° trend lines for support/resistance
Consider using moving averages
Add a few targets
Explain what the chart means So what should you do now?
76. FTSE Chart for your report
77. Try Moving Averages instead
78.
Include some Fibonacci
Extensions or Retracments And if you really want to ....
79. FTSE with Fib. extensions
80. Look at a different perspective
81. Your analysis will
stand out from the crowd !
?
Email: Jeremy@Updata.co.uk The result is…..