Analysis Using
Trend Lines
by Howard Arrington
The six tips illustrated this month are effective
techniques for finding winning trades and maximizing
profits. Even though my illustrations make it look easy,
the process of analyzing charts and trading is still hard
work. Also, I have the benefit of hindsight in selecting a
good example to use to illustrate these tips.
The Power of Trend Lines
I am frequently asked which is the best study or tool to
use to trade the markets. I think the best analytical tool
is drawing a straight line on a chart beneath the lows of
bars to show a rising trend, and above the highs of bars to
show a falling trend. A tool this simple does not require a
computer. Yet, because traders have computers, they
overlook the power of a trend line, and number crunch
massive quantities of data through complex formulas
searching for a secret methodology no one has discovered.
Forget it. I have been there and done that. I keep coming
back to the simplicity of manually drawing trend lines on a
chart. When the chart trend reverses and breaks through the
trend line, a new position is taken. This is the primary
tool I use, and everything else you learn is just an
enhancement to the power of the trend line.
Ensign
Windows has a very powerful and unique tool called Auto
Trends, which is illustrated on the chart above. The trend
lines are calculated and drawn automatically by the
software, in real-time. The tool has proven to be very
helpful and greatly appreciated by many day traders. The
Auto Trends tool has several options that increase its
value. These options can be seen on the property window for
the tool.
An Alarmed trend line will display an alert
message box in green when price action breaks upward through
a descending trend line, and display an alert message box in
red when prices break below the ascending trend line.
Average Trend uses the principle of
Parallelism in trends, and suggests the next trend based on
the average slopes of prior trend lines. This feature is
illustrated in the next chart.
The red trend lines are the average trend
lines and show the typical slope seen in earlier trends.
Channel Lines and 50% Lines (mid-channel)
can be added by checking the boxes for those options.
The Gann 1x1 option will automatically place
the 1x1 line on the chart from the swing points. This is
similar to placing a Gann fan on the chart to show the 1x1
line. The slope for the Gann 1x1 line is determined by the
proprietary technique Ensign Windows uses to square price
and time.
The last two options for the Auto Trends
tool can be used to show Support and Resistance and Break
Out trend lines, as illustrated in this chart.
The Power of Parallel Lines
The first analysis principle is that prices move in
trends, but the trends do not last forever. Eventually
price movement changes direction and breaks through the
trend line. The second principle I use is observing that up
trend lines are frequently parallel to each other. This
means there is a repeatable chart characteristic in the rate
at which price movement advances. Likewise, down trend
lines are frequently parallel to each other. I use this
principle of parallel lines to give me an idea of what would
be a typical up trend or typical down trend when price
movement changes direction, and a new trend starts.
The Power of Pennants
Pennant formations indicate the balancing of opposing
market forces. The pennant is a narrowing triangle where
prices are making subsequent lower-highs and higher-lows.
Prices usually break out of a pennant pattern rapidly with
the frequent presence of a gap, increased bar range and
increased volume. Join the move in the direction of the
break-out. Odds favor a breakout to the upside from an
ascending pennant, and to the downside from a descending
pennant. A smaller variation to a pennant is a flag where
price movement pauses and moves sideways after a steep
move. Odds favor a break away from the flag to resume in
the same direction.
The Power of Fibonacci Price Levels
Fibonacci price levels are constructed by drawing
horizontal lines at the top and bottom of a recent trend.
The band is then sub-divided with additional horizontal
lines at significant percentages. The three retracement
sub-division percentages I use the most are 38.2 percent, 50
percent, and 61.8 percent. These percentages are members of
a set of Fibonacci Price levels. When a trend is being used
to forecast the size of a subsequent larger trend, the
significant percentage I use is 161.8 percent.
Prices often extend or retrace to these Fibonacci price
levels, and then reverse direction. Confidence is increased
that a trend has fulfilled itself when its slope is parallel
to other trends, the number of bars in the trend is a
Fibonacci count, and the price is near a Fibonacci price
level. Fibonacci Price Levels are easily constructed on an
Ensign Windows' chart using the trend top and bottom I
select.
Another principle of horizontal lines is that previous
resistance becomes future support, and past support becomes
future resistance. Always consider significant support and
resistance levels from the past and extend horizontal lines
at these levels into the future. Note in the example that
the pennant point consolidated on the horizontal line I
labeled as Fibonacci Bottom for the first 5 wave down
trend. Also, this horizontal line was resistance to a
couple of the wave tops I labeled with 4 and diamond 4.
The Power of Counting Waves
Underlying forces cause markets to move work in ways that
create identifiable patterns, or a series of waves. Big
trends are called impulse waves, and each impulse is
followed by a correction wave. The theory named after Ralph
Nelson Elliott, is basically expressed that there will be 5
waves in the main trend, followed by 3 waves in the
corrective reaction.
I keep it simple. I look for trends with 5 waves, and
corrections with 3 waves. If I see the pattern, my
confidence is increased that the current price movement is
due for a reversal. I also look at longer term daily,
weekly and monthly charts to consider the direction of the
security in its bigger picture. Trade with the trend and
use corrections as opportunities to join the direction of
the main trend.
The Power of Counting Bars
Over and over again, I am amazed at the repetition when I
count the number of bars in a trend. The count frequently
is one of the following numbers: 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, or
55. These numbers are members of a set of numbers called
the Fibonacci number sequence. Take any chart and use a
straight edge to mark the trends. Count the number of bars
in each trend and label the trend line with the bar count.
Each chart will have a characteristic that starts to
appear. I have seen charts that with regularity move up and
down for either 5 or 8 or 13 bars, and then reverse
direction. This tip can be used to develop patience, and
know with greater accuracy on which bar the trend top or
bottom will be put in place. For example, there are 8 bars
in the trend from the point labeled diamond 4 to point
diamond 5.
I hope you enjoyed this review of 6 simple yet effective
tools to use in analyzing your charts. Keep it simple, and
stay on the right side by trading with the trend.
Education:
Stock Option Model - October
by Howard Arrington
This is the October update of the paper trading model
based on Bill Hatch's July article
Straddle-Strangle-Swap. The model is selling near term
options in Dell Computers (DELL), Home Depot (HD), Office
Depot (OPD), and Disney (DIS), and holding longer term
options as an insurance policy. The plan is to execute a
calendar roll-out each month by buying back the short
options on the day before expiration, and selling short
options one month out. The roll-out of replacing the
October options with November options was carried out on
Thursday, October 14th, 2004. The November roll-out will be
carried out on Thursday, November 18th. This is where the
model stands.
DELL continued to trend upward in October which hurt
HDJG.X. Also, Disney decided to trend upward away from
$22.50 and that contributed to a loss for the month in
Disney. Since DELL and HD had strangle legs expiring in
October, those two symbols will be closed out and the model
will continue with just ODP and DIS for the balance of 2004.
The $22.50 strike in DIS which lost $1425 in
October will be resold in the November option. There is a
good chance that DIS will return to a more average range
price, which would recoup the October DISJX.X loss.
Summary:
-
Dell: - 375 - 425 + 175 + 775 + 825 +
425 = $1400 net gain, position closed
-
HD: +1375 - 475 - 2025 + 225 - 625 +
75 = -$1450 net loss, position closed
-
ODP: - 625 - 175 + 1175 - 175 + 425 -
75 = $ 550 net gain
-
DIS: +525 - 525 - 25 + 525 - 1425 +
325 = -$ 600 net loss
DELL and ODP basically traded sideways and
produced a profit for the model. HD and DIS trended upward
and produced losses, which is unfortunate yet something that
happens. The model is fulfilling its educational objective
by illustrating both the reward and the risk.
Education:
Stock Option
Model - Update
by Bill Hatch
Here are the net trades for the options I traded last
month....
Home Depot: I did some evaluating of the HDJG.X and
selling a calendar spread would not bring me more than
$0.50, so I sold a "diagonal". I bought back my HDJE.X and
sold my November $37.50 Call (HDKU.X). My net cost on this
was $1.80. That was less than it would have been to sell a
November call and settling up for the $2.50 next month. I
was in this position long enough before your time trial that
it did not cost me anything, but I did not make the money I
expected to make. I will not
trade HD again unless I see some reliable variability and
start trading calls and puts in expectation
of directional movement.
Dell Computer: I bought back the October $35.00
Calls and sold November $35.00 Calls
(DLQJG.X and DLQKG.X respectively) for $0.95. Similarly, I
bought back my October 35.00 Puts and sold the November Put
(DLQVG.X and DLQWG.X respectively) for $0.90. That gives a
net of +$1.85 to roll the straddle over one month.
Office Depot: The $15 Calls (ODPJC.X and ODPKC.X)
sold for $0.50. The $15 Puts (ODPVC.X and ODPWC.X) sold for
$0.70 for a net $1.25 to roll into next month.
I netted $1.70 rolling MOT (Motorola, Inc.), and $1.20
rolling DIS (Walt Disney Co.). My personal profits on these
are marred by the Home Depot. The others have all returned
a good profit. |