Options Education
The Definitive Guide to Point and Figure
Jeremy Du Plessis
Click image above to get it at Amazon
For the uninitiated, Point and Figure charting is the
only charting method that analyzes price without the noise of time. The noise
amplification of time in other forms of charting - Candlesticks, Heikin Ashi
and OHLC is visually disruptive as you toggle between daily, minute, weekly and
monthly charts.
This visual confusion is removed with Point and Figure
charts. They are binary in their
construction - either there is a buy/sell signal or buy/sell pattern or there
is not. It is in this style of
clear-cut clarity that Jeremy du Plessis writes his book.
Jeremy trained as an automotive engineer, then studied
as an economist, but gave both up to become a Technical Analyst. He founded
Indexia Research in 1983 and pioneered the firm’s development of PC-based
Technical Analysis. In 2002, he led the merger of Indexia with Updata plc,
where he is currently the Head of Technical Analysis and software design. While most of the clients of Updata are
institutional clients, namely European and US commercial and investment banks,
the Point & Figure methods he teaches in the book are universal and
relevant for retail trading purposes.
He is a Fellow of the
Society of Technical Analysts (FSTA) in the UK, and a member of the American
Market Technicians Association (MTA).
The MTA awarded him the designation of Chartered Market Technician
(CMT).
The engineering precision coupled with the factual
economic rationale forms the solid cornerstones of this almanac on P&F
methods. With 456+ pages and over 300 charts in full color, the book is aptly
sub-titled “A Comprehensive Guide to the Theory and Practical Use of the Point
and Figure Charting Method.”
Jeremy is the alternative and consummate “financial
engineer”. He avoids heavy economic jargon and Fundamental Analysis is
dismissed early on in the book, referred to as the “F” word. What he needs to
say is effectively captured in the way he visually communicates through the
charts.
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 456
pages in total, excluding appendices.
Introduction
to Technical Analysis. 14, 3.07%.
1.
Introduction to Point and Figure Charts. 26, 5.70%.
2.
Characteristics and Construction.
62, 13.60%.
3.
Understanding Point and Figure Charts.
92, 20.18%.
4.
Projecting Price Targets. 66,
14.47%.
5.
Analysing Point and Figure Charts.
64, 14.04%.
6.
Point and Figure Charts of Indicators.
18, 3.95%.
7.
Optimisation of Point and Figure Charts.
24, 5.26%.
8.
Point and Figure's Contribution to Market Breadth. 22, 4.82%.
9.
Advanced Point and Figure Techniques.
38, 8.33%.
10.
Chart Examples. 20, 4.39%.
11.
Conclusion. 6, 1.32%.
12.
References and Further Reading. 4,
0.88%.
Focus on chapters
2, 3, 4, 5 and 9, which makes up about 71% 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.
2. Characteristics and Construction. This chapters deals with the
logic for chart constructions using Xs and Os, Up and Down moves, Xs and Os
called boxes, Box size, Reversal Size, Variable Sensitivity, Gaps, Price on
Y-axis but no time on X-axis, Two-dimensional charts, No Volume, Demand and
Supply and Naming Point and Figure charts.
Chapter
2 covers the foundational attributes for building Point and Figure charts. What
is covered here, that is glossed over in most P&F books, is the added
emphasis on varying the sensitivity of charts by changing the box size and
reversal size. Gaps are eliminated
and do not feature in the charts at all.
Volume 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 studies. P&F
chart construction excludes time altogether. Unlike time-based charts (e.g. Candlesticks/Heikin
Ashi/OHLC, etc.), where a minute/day/week/month chart results in different
views causing visual confusion.
The sub-section on 1-box, 2-box, 3-box and 5-box
reversal charts is what makes this chapter different. Most literature on the
subject concentrates on 3-box sizing with token treatment of other box
sizes. This where Jeremy’s depth
of experience becomes evident. 34
pages are dedicated to the effects of raising price sensitivity (1-box reversal
and 2-box reversal) for intra-day/day trading purposes versus lowering price
sensitivity (5-box reversal) for trading multi-month positions or highly
volatile products. A 3-box reversal chart is the default and is more relevant
for trading positions held for weeks going a month. It is applicable to the
majority of Indexes/ETFs. Practical reasons are given for changing the reversal
count, which adjusts the weighting given to the prevailing column and the
underlying’s statistical volatility. This affects the intensity of price
continuing or discontinuing along its trend.
3. Understanding Point and Figure Charts. The topics covered include: Point and Figure Signals, The
strength of the pattern, differences between 1-box and 3-box patterns, Traps,
Broadening Patterns, Bullish and Bearish Patterns that reverse, Poles, Congestion
Analysis, Signals with the trend or against the trend, Trend lines on Point and
Figure charts.
Clear
illustrations are given on demand pushing price up a column of Xs, whereas
supply pushes price down in a column of Os. Thorough examples are given of how
patterns vary according to the reversal size used. There are binary rules to
ignore or trade buy/sell signals that are part of a larger, more complex
pattern and patterns that can trap the untrained eye into a trade that should
have been avoided in the first place. 45° degree Bullish Support and Bearish
Resistance Trend Lines are used to remove subjectivity if a certain price level
qualifies as Support or Resistance.
Congestion Analysis looks at the width of patterns, where the area taken
up by a pattern determines the strength of price advancing or declining that
signals potential trade entries or exits.
4.
Projecting Price Targets. P&F price targets are
established on vertical and horizontal box counts. This section deals with
Counts on 1-box reversal charts, Counts on 3-box reversal charts, Nearest
counts must be achieved first, Clustering of counts, Negating a count, Opposing
counts, Combining counts with trend lines, Unfulfilled counts, Improbable and
impossible counts, a Good counter or Bad counter, Counts of log scale charts
and Risk to Reward ratios.
Estimating
a price target with P&F charts is not subjective but a clearly computed
forecast based on box counts. Each box is sized as an identical square without
exception. As box sizes are
uniform, the counts identify unambiguous targets. They target may not be 100%
accurate every time but they are unambiguous. Establishing the vertical and
horizontal count of Price Targets is necessary to determine the intensity of
strength and weakness in price trends.
There is a uniqueness in using 3-box reversal charts, which enables both
vertical and horizontal counts to assess the viability of a price target.
Whereas, a 1-box reversal chart is limited to horizontal counts only. The more counts that cluster around a
particular price target, the stronger the target is.
What is
distinct about Jeremy’s contribution to this topic is the addition of Fibonacci
retracement analysis to conventional P&F methods.
5.
Analysing Point and Figure Charts. This chapter integrates the foundational techniques
covered in chapters 2, 3 and 4 with practical trading examples. The emphasis is
on application and covers these topics: Reversal Size, Choosing the correct box
size, Choosing the data series, Log scale charts, Analysis of 1-box, 2-box and
3-box reversal charts, Stops in Point and Figure analysis and Early entry
points.
Changing the box size affects the time horizon, not to
be confused with time frame, as P&F charts exclude units of time
(day/week/month/year). The smaller
the box size, the shorter the time horizon, e.g. 1-box reversal charts suit
intra-day trades versus 3-box reversal charts are geared for trades lasting
30-60 days. All trends lines are
standardized to one standard of a 45° degree line. This is not a rigid but consistent
methodology and is possible as variability in time as discreet variable has
been removed from the charts altogether.
Trend lines are the most important element of any P&F chart and must
be given first priority above buy/sell signals. The more complex a
Bullish/Bearish pattern becomes the more significant it becomes. To validate trades to avoid, enter
or and exit continually assess the
price target, trend lines and vertical count of a column’s height and
horizontal count of row’s width.
9.
Advanced Point and Figure Techniques.
This
chapter is what sets this body of work apart from other P&F
literature. It covers how to use
moving averages on Point and Figure charts, the need to differentiate between
moving averages on a 1-box reversal chart versus a 3-box reversal chart, using
the Parabolic stop and reverse (SAR) Indicator on a P&F chart and the
Overbought/Oversold analysis on P&F charts with Bollinger Bands.
The
moving averages are a straightforward confirmation to accept or reject a Point
and Figure buy or sell signal. The
Parabolic SAR pinpoints trends to qualify a P&F buy/sell signal as one to
avoid or take for trade entry. With Bollinger Bands, there is a further
refinement of the methodology on Squeeze points – statistical volatility
contraction/expansion is considered significant where the column length between
bands is equal to or less than the previous squeeze.
Jeremy
is the first to pioneer the combination of Point & Figure methods with
Moving Averages, the Parabolic SAR and Bollinger Bands.
In conclusion, Jeremy du Plessis revives a revered
ancient craft of pure price analysis to transform demand/supply analytics into
relevant trading practices for current market conditions. It is the depth of his insights that
gives you the foresight to thoroughly understand why charting price using only
P&F methods is conclusive, without the need for other forms of charting.