Equivolume displays prices in a manner that
emphasizes the relationship between price and volume. Equivolume was
developed by Richard W. Arms, Jr., and is further explained in his book
Volume Cycles in the Stock Market.
Instead of displaying volume as an "afterthought" on
the lower margin of a chart, Equivolume combines price and volume in a
two-dimensional box. The top line of the box is the high for the period
and the bottom line is the low for the period. The width of the box is
the unique feature of Equivolume--it represents the volume for the
period.
Figure 46 shows the components of an Equivolume box:
Figure 46
The bottom scale on an Equivolume chart is based on
volume, rather than on dates. This suggests that volume, rather than
time, is the guiding influence of price change. To quote Mr. Arms, "If
the market wore a wristwatch, it would be divided into shares, not
hours."
Candlevolume
Candlevolume charts are a unique hybrid of
Equivolume and candlestick charts. Candlevolume charts possess the
shadows and body characteristics of candlestick charts, plus the volume
width attribute of Equivolume charts. This combination gives you the
unique ability to study candlestick patterns in combination with their
volume related movements.
Interpretation
The shape of each Equivolume box provides a picture
of the supply and demand for the security during a specific trading
period. Short and wide boxes (heavy volume accompanied with small
changes in price) tend to occur at turning points, while tall and narrow
boxes (light volume accompanied with large changes in price) are more
likely to occur in established trends.
Especially important are boxes which penetrate
support or resistance levels, since volume confirms penetrations. A
"power box" is one in which both height and width increase
substantially. Power boxes provide excellent confirmation to a breakout.
A narrow box, due to light volume, puts the validity of a breakout in
question.
Example
The following Equivolume chart shows Phillip Morris'
prices.
Note the price consolidation from June to September
with resistance around $51.50. The strong move above $51.50 in October
produced a power box validating the breakout.
The following is a Candlevolume chart of the British
Pound.
You can see that this hybrid chart is similar to a
candlestick chart, but the width of the bars vary based on volume.