The Technician’s Basic Tool: The Price Chart

Whether you trade short-term or long-term, discretionary or systematic, your goal as a technician is always the same: to find profitable patterns in price behavior.

To accomplish this, technicians use a number of methods to identify the prevailing price trend, or to identify points at which a trend is about to reverse (the time scale, of course, can vary). These basis for these techniques can be roughly divided in two categories: chart analysis and technical indicators.

Because basic chart analysis is the backbone of technical trading, we’ll explain the most popular chart types, what they tell you, and where chart analysis fits into an overall trading plan. In future articles, we’ll go into more detail about specific chart pattern and trend analysis.

Elements of a price chart

Price charts can depict price action in any number of time frames or styles. In almost all cases, though, the horizontal x-axis of the chart represents time and the vertical y-axis represents price. Before discussing the different types of charts, though, there are a few simple, but important concepts you need to understand.


  • High. The highest price of a given trading period, be it an hour, day, week, or month.

  • Low. The lowest price of a given trading period.

  • Opening price (or open). The price at the beginning of a trading period (usually a day). For stocks, the open is the price of the first trade that is recorded after the market opens; for futures, the opening price represents the average price (approximately) of the first minute of the trading session.

  • Closing price (or close). The last price of the trading session (for stocks) or the representative trading price of the last minute of the trading session for futures. The closing price takes on special importance because it functions as a representative price for a particular trading session–the price the market arrived at after a day of trading. The closing price is the most commonly used in technical indicator calculations.

  • Range. The difference between two specific price levels, most commonly the high and low of a given period. For example, the daily range is the difference between the high and low prices of the day, the weekly range is the difference between the high and low prices of the week, etc.

  • Volume. The number of shares or contracts traded in a particular market in a given time period (usually day).

  • Open interest. The number of open trades in a particular market. Both volume and open interest provide measures of liquidity, i.e., the amount of trading activity in a market, and thereby the ease with which you can get in and out of it. Liquid markets are generally less risky and easier to trade than illiquid markets because they are less prone to wild swings or gaps between prices. (However, some traders use strategies specifically designed to profit from the volatility in illiquid markets.)

The bar chart

The most popular type of price chart is the daily bar chart, which summarizes the price action of a trading session as a vertical line, or bar, ranging from the high price to the low price. The closing price appears as a horizontal hash mark extending out from the right of the bar and the opening price appears as a horizontal hash mark extending out from the left of the bar (sometimes the opening price is omitted).


Figure 1. A price bar from a daily bar chart.

Figure 1 depicts a typical price bar. A daily bar chart, for example, would represent each day’s trading with an individual bar: The high of the bar would be the high price of the day, the low of the bar would be the low price of day, and the left and right hash marks would be the opening and closing prices of the day, respectively. The price bar succinctly summarizes the day’s trading activity: the daily range (from high to low), where the market opened, and where it closed. Figure 2 shows a daily bar chart for Dell computer.


Figure 2. Daily bar chart, Dell Computer.

Time frames

Price charts can be constructed in virtually any time frame: minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, quarters, years, etc. A weekly bar chart, for example, would be constructed exactly the same as the daily bar chart except that it would use the high and low prices of the week rather than the high and low prices of a day.

The opening and closing prices for a weekly chart are simply the opening price for the first trading day of the week (usually Monday, unless there is a holiday) and the closing price of the last day of the week (usually Friday, unless there is a holiday).


Figure 3. Weekly bar chart, Dell Computer.

Similarly, each bar on a monthly bar chart would use the opening price of the first day of the trading month and the closing price of the last day of the trading month. Figure 3 shows a weekly bar chart that also encompasses the time period captured in the daily chart shown in Figure 2. Figure 4 shows a monthly bar chart for the same stock.


Figure 4. Monthly bar chart, Dell Computer.

An hourly chart, by comparison, uses the high and low prices of each hour of a trading session to define price bars, and a five-minute chart uses the high and low prices of each five-minute period. For such intraday charts, opening and closing prices are often omitted (since, obviously, there are no official opens or closes reported), or the first recorded price of a particular period might be used as the opening price and the last recorded price of the period as the closing price. Figure 3.5 shows a five-minute chart.


Figure 5. Five-minute bar chart, June ’99 T-bond futures. Note: Bars are tightly compressed.

The smallest time frame chart that can be constructed is a tick chart, which creates a data point for every trade reported in a market. (Tick refers to the minimum price move in any market.)

Looking at price charts of varying time frames allows you to focus on as short or long a time period as you want. Longer-term price charts also enable you to provide a context for the price action on shorter-term charts. A trade signal generated from a pattern on a short-term chart may be supported or negated by the activity on the long-term chart. A short-term buy signal might be ignored, for example, if the long-term chart shows a strong downtrend is in force.

Other types of charts

Bar charts are the most widely used chart type, but they are not your only choice as a technician. Other chart styles give you different perspectives on price action.

Line (close-only) charts

The line chart plots only the closing prices from each trading session, essentially creating a simplified version of the standard bar chart. Figure 6 shows a close-only version of the price data from Figure 2. Some charting software will allow you to create line charts using the high price, low price, or average price from a particular bar instead of the closing price, but the closing price is most commonly used in technical analysis.


Figure 6. Line chart, Dell Computer.

Candlestick charts

Candlestick charts, which originated in Japan, are very similar to bar charts, although they pre-date them by a number of years.

Instead of a bar for each day (or week or month, etc.), the candlestick chart uses rectangles that range from the opening price to the closing price of each trading session. The rectangle is dark (usually black) if the closing price is lower than the opening price (a down day), or light (usually white) if the close is higher than the open (an up day).

The high and low price extremes extend as vertical lines above or below these rectangles, forming “wicks” to the bodies of the candles represented by the rectangles. Of course, if the high and low of the day are identical to the open and close, no wicks will exist; conversely, if the open and close are the same price, no rectangle (body) will exist. Like bar charts, candlestick charts can be constructed on any time frame. Figure 7 shows the candlestick version of the price data from Figure 2.


Figure 7. Daily candlestick chart, Dell Computer.

Some technicians feel candlestick charts highlight certain price patterns standard bar charts do not. There are numerous elaborately named candlestick patterns, ranging from one “candle” to several, which supposedly portend price reversals or trend continuations depending on their context. (Most tests of such patterns, however, show little success in the way of systematic application.)

There are also several candlestick chart variations, like renko and kagi charts, but an in-depth discussion of these charts and their interpretation is outside the scope of this article. Because candlestick charts use exactly the same price data in exactly the same time frame as a corresponding bar chart, the preference for one chart over another can only be considered a matter of taste.

Point-and-figure charts

The point-and-figure chart differs from other price charts in that its time axis is not constant–prices are not plotted day by day or week by week, etc. Instead, point-and-figure charts use columns of ascending Xs and descending Os to portray up moves and down moves (of a certain magnitude), respectively, in a market.

For example, every X might represent a .5 point rise (referred to as the “box size”) in the stock’s price. Price declines would only be denoted by a column of Os if price fell, say, 1.5 points (three boxes, referred to as the “reversal amount”). In this case, if the stock rose from 25 to 25.5 to 26 to 26.5, you would add three Xs to your column of Xs, one for each .5 point rise from 25 to 26.5. If it rose only a quarter point or a half-point, or declined only a point, you would do nothing. Only when price dropped by 1.5 points or more would you stop adding ascending Xs and start a column of descending Os immediately to the right.

The larger the box size and reversal amount you use, the less sensitive your chart will be to smaller price fluctuations. Because a one-point move (or whatever increment you use for your box size) may occur in one hour or two days, the price action depicted in a point-and-figure chart is independent of time. Point-and-figure practitioners feel these charts provide a clearer picture of the tug-of-war between supply and demand in a market. Figure 8 shows a point-and-figure chart of the same price data shown in Figure 2 using a box size of .5 points and a reversal size of 1.5 points.


Figure 8. Point-and-figure chart, Dell Computer.

Volume and open interest

Many price charts includes figures that track how many stock shares or futures contracts have traded during a certain time period (volume) and how many open positions exist in a market (open interest). Because volume and open interest can only be calculated after the end of trading, these figures are usually released one day after the day they represent, i.e., Wednesday’s volume is not published by the exchange until Thursday.

Volume and open interest indicate how liquid a market is–how much trader interest and activity exists. High volume and open interest accompany active, healthy markets, and some traders look for high or rising volume and open interest to confirm trends and other price moves.

Volume and open interest often are plotted at the bottom of price charts as a line (for volume) and a histogram (for open interest). Figure 9 shows a daily chart with volume and open interest included at the bottom.


Figure 9. Daily bar chart with volume and open interest, continuous Japanese yen futures.

What charts tell you

Regardless of what type you use, all price charts communicate the same information: where prices have been, a clear picture of market trends, significant historical high and low prices, and an idea of the volatility in a market. Such information can suggest both what kind of trading approach might be appropriate and which markets may be suitable for trading.

The most basic form of technical analysis involves identifying specific price patterns (longer-term top and bottom formations like head-and-shoulders patterns, or continuation patterns like triangles and flags, etc., as well as one-day patterns like spikes and gaps) and exploiting their probabilities.

Basically, charts allow you to identify trends and inflection points. Chart analysis is a visually based, subjective skill that nonetheless can yield excellent results when approached realistically, and offers an alternative to mechanical, indicator-based techniques.

Finally, historical charts and price data allow you to test your ideas before you actually trade them. Luckily, computers and the Internet give you a great deal of power and flexibility in researching and analyzing charts and price data.

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