Options Education
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The history of Point & Figure charting is often
debated, as its exact date of origin and inventor remains unknown. Victor De
Villiers and Owen Taylor stated in 1933 that the Point & Figure method is
more than 60 years old. Some have accredited the method to the founding father
of Technical Analysis – Charles Dow, as a matter of convenience, for his
pre-eminent work on the dynamics of supply and demand driving price movement.
What is not debatable with the Point & Figure
method:
❑ The
chart’s construction excludes time altogether. Unlike time-based charts (e.g. Candlesticks/Heikin Ashi),
where a minute/day/week/month chart results in different views causing visual
confusion. This confusion is
removed with P&F charts.
❑ Volume
activity is already embedded in the Reversal counts of the P&F chart,
without having to graph volume separately. There is no need to fuss with reconciling price against
volume-based TA studies.
These distinct traits give the P&F method its
systematic symmetry, which enables the charting of price without the
amplification of noise from time and time-based volume.
Tom Dorsey’s 20+ years of mastering the P&F method
is vividly demonstrated in his book, Point & Figure Charting: The Essential
Application for Forecasting and Tracking Market Prices (3rd Edition). For a technical subject, Tom writes in
an easily comprehensible style with ample graphic illustrations to reinforce
learning.
There are adequate reader reviews on Amazon and Google
Book Search, to help you decide if you will get the book. For those who have
just started or are about to read the book, I’ve summarized the core concepts
in the larger and essential chapters to help you get through them quicker.
The number on the right of the title of the chapter is
the number of pages contained within that chapter. It is not the page
number. The percentages represent
how much each chapter makes up of the 372 pages in total, excluding appendices.
The book also comes with a CD-ROM.
Part One: Learn
the Point and Figure Methodology.
Chapter 1: Introduction. 18, 4.84%.
Chapter 2: Point and Figure Chart Fundamentals. 34, 9.14%.
Chapter 3: Chart Patterns. 48, 12.90%.
Chapter 4: Foundations of Relative Strength. 38, 10.22%.
Chapter 5: Advanced Relative Strength Concepts. 36,
9.68%.
Chapter 6: Primary Market Indicators for Gauging
Risk. 46, 12.37%.
Chapter 7: Secondary Market Indicators. 26, 6.99%.
Chapter 8: Sector Rotation Tools. 30, 8.06%.
Part Two: The Point and Figure Methodology - A
Complete Analysis Tool.
Chapter 9: Fixed Income Indicators. 16, 4.30%.
Chapter 10: Utilizing the Exchanged Traded Fund
Market. 28, 7.53%.
Chapter 11: Evaluating the Commodity Market for
Opportunities. 38, 10.22%.
Part Three: Apply the Point and Figure Methodology to
Your Investment Process.
Chapter 12: Portfolio Construction and
Management. 10, 2.69%.
Focus on chapters
2, 3, 4 and 6, which makes up about 45% of the book. These chapters are
relevant for practical trading purposes.
Here are the key points for these focus chapters, which I’m summarizing
from a retail trader’s perspective.
Chapter 2: Point and
Figure Chart Fundamentals. The basic tenets of a P&F chart
includes: The Bullish Support Line, Bearish Resistance Line and Price
Objectives which are counted in 2 ways - a Vertical Count and a Horizontal
Count. There is further refinement
of using Support and Resistance Lines as Reversal points, especially when the
product is trading near its 52 week High or 52 week Low. P&F charts are
binary in their construction. X
representing Demand can only be in a column of Xs. O representing Supply can only be in a column of Os. Due to
this clear cut charting convention, there is no confusion if price has broken
out to the upside, broken down or price has failed to breakout/breakdown and
has gone into a basing pattern.
Chapter 3: Chart
Patterns. Unlike
Candlesticks and Heikin Ashi charts with their myriad of variations in
patterns, P&F charts have a finite number of patterns. P&F charts only
have one Buy Signal and 7 Breakout Confirmation patterns. There is only one Sell Signal and 7
Breakdown Confirmation patterns. There are only 4 P&F Reversal
patterns. Lastly, there are only 5
patterns that are considered “Trap/Shakeout” patterns, typically used to warn
you against entry and signal exit if you are currently in a trade. It is their
symmetry that makes P&F charts a systematic and reliable tool to visualize
pure price behavior.
Chapter 4:
Foundations of Relative Strength. Relative Strength measures how one
product outperforms/underperforms another product in comparative terms. It is nothing more than
taking one price as the Numerator, divided by another price as the Denominator
and multiplying the outcome by 100.
RS = (Price 1 / Price 2) x 100.
Typically, RS calculations use daily closing prices. Though simple in its mathematical
construction, Relative Strength is ingeniously powerful when it is applied not
only within a sector but also across sectors. The power of Relative Strength
comes into its own when it is used to compare one asset class, for e.g.
Equities against Commodities, Currencies and Bonds. As Relative Strength only uses price as the numerator and
denominator in calculating a comparative measure, it overcomes the shortcomings
of Fundamental metrics like the Dividend Yield, Price/Book Ratio and the
Price/Cash Flow Ratio (the cousin of the P/E). Relative Strength is not infallible. It fails the least when benchmarked
against Fundamental metrics.
Chapter 6: Primary Market Indicators for Gauging
Risk. The primary Indicator for gauging market risk is the
Bullish Percent Index (BPI). The
BPI measures market breadth and applies only to an Index, never a single
stock. As the BPI of that Broad
Market/Sector rises above 70%, the Index becomes Over Bought. Strong Sell signals
occur as the BPI rises above 70% and reverses down by a minimum of 6% - signals
become stronger with confirmed Breakdown patterns below prior Resistance
levels. As the BPI of that Broad
Market/Sector falls below 30%, the Index becomes Over Sold. Strong Buy signals occur as the
BPI falls below 30% and reverses up by a minimum of 6% - signals become
stronger with confirmed Breakout patterns above prior Support levels. When the
BPI of that Broad Market/Sector is range-bound near 50%, the BPI signals price
indecision. Dorsey Wright has
constructed BPIs for all 10 sectors of the S&P 500 and also Bullish Percent
Charts for non-equity asset classes including Commodities, Currencies and Fixed
Income.
To conclude, as you complete chapters 2 and 4 in particular,
it becomes clear that:
❑
You do not need the typical 4 price data points (Open,
High, Low and Close) in time-based charts found in Candlestick/Heikin Ashi
charts to determine if price has become directionally biased; or, if price has
gone into a non-directional pattern.