Point & Figure ("P&F") charts differ from
traditional price charts in that they completely disregard the passage
of time and only display changes in prices. Rather than having price on
the y-axis and time on the x-axis, P&F charts display price changes on
both axes. This is similar toKagi, Renko, and Three Line Break charts.
Interpretation
Point & Figure charts display the underlying supply
and demand of prices. A column of Xs shows that demand is exceeding
supply (a rally); a column of Os shows that supply is exceeding demand
(a decline); and a series of short columns shows that supply and demand
are relatively equal.
There are several chart patterns that regularly
appear in P&F charts. These include Double Tops and Bottoms, Bullish and
Bearish Signal formations, Bullish and Bearish Symmetrical Triangles,
Triple Tops and Bottoms, etc. It is beyond the scope of this book to
fully explain all of these patterns.
Example
The following two charts both show the prices of
Atlantic Richfield. The first chart displays prices in P&F, the second
chart displays prices as high, low, close bars.
As I mentioned above, P&F charts focus only on price
action. Looking at this P&F chart, you can see that prices were
initially contained between a support level at 114 and a resistance
level at 121. When prices broke above the resistance level at 121 (the
long column of Xs), that level became the new support level. This new
support level eventually failed (the long column of Os), prices
re-tested the support at 114, made a small rally, and then fell below
the 114 support level.
This next chart shows the same pricing information
as the preceding P&F chart. You can see that the support and resistance
levels are also identifiable in this bar chart, but the P&F chart made
it much easier to identify them.
Calculation
Point & Figure charts display an "X" when prices
rise by the "box size" (a value you specify) and display an "O" when
prices fall by the box size. Note that no Xs or Os are drawn if prices
rise or fall by an amount that is less than the box size.
Each column can contain either Xs or Os, but never
both. In order to change columns (e.g., from an X column to an O
column), prices must reverse by the "reversal amount" (another value you
specify) multiplied by the box size. For example, if the box size is
three points and the reversal amount is two boxes, then prices must
reverse direction six points (three multiplied by two) in order to
change columns. If you are in a column of Xs, the price must fall six
points to change to a column of Os. If you are in a column of Os, the
price must rise six points to change to a column of Xs.
The changing of columns identifies a change in the
trend of prices. When a new column of Xs appears, it shows that prices
are rallying higher. When a new column of Os appears, it shows that
prices are moving lower.
Because prices must reverse direction by the
reversal amount, the minimum number of Xs or Os that can appear in a
column is equal to the "reversal amount."
The common practice is to use the high and low
prices (not just the close) to decide if prices have changed enough to
display a new box.