The Directional Movement System
Directional Movement
The Directional Movement System is a fairly complex indicator developed
by Welles Wilder and explained in his book, New Concepts in Technical
Trading Systems.
Most indicators have one major weakness - they are not suited for use in
both trending and ranging markets. The key feature of the Directional
Movement System is that it first identifies whether the market is
trending before providing signals for trading the trend.
Directional Movement System measures the ability of bulls and bears to
move price outside the previous day's trading range. The system consists
of three lines:
The Positive Direction Indicator (+DI) summarizes upward trend movement;
The Negative Direction Indicator (-DI) summarizes downward trend
movement; and
The Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) indicates whether the
market is trending or ranging.
See Construction for further details.
Welles Wilder does not use the standard moving average formula. This
should be taken into account when selecting indicator time periods. See
Welles Wilder's Indicators.
Trading Signals
A number of different trading systems have developed around Directional
Movement. The following rules are based on the system presented by Dr
Alexander Elder in Trading for a Living:
Go long when +DI is above -DI and either:
ADX rises while +DI and ADX are above -DI;
or
ADX turns up from below +DI and -DI.
Exit when +DI crosses below -DI.
See ADX below for further details.
Go short when -DI is above +DI and either:
ADX rises while -DI and ADX are above +DI;
or
ADX turns up from below +DI and -DI.
Exit when -DI crosses below +DI.
Use stop-losses at all times.
ADX:
Declining ADX shows that the market is losing direction. When ADX falls
below both +DI and -DI it signals a lifeless market. Do not trade with
DMS until ADX has clearly turned off the bottom. Dr Elder suggests
waiting until ADX rises 4 steps off its low (e.g. ADX rises to 19 from a
low of 15). The longer that ADX has remained below both +DI and -DI the
stronger the subsequent trend is likely to be.
When ADX rises above both +DI and -DI it signals that the market is
becoming overheated. Take profits when ADX turns downwards from above
+DI and -DI. |