ADX (Average Directional Index)
History
Average Directional Index (ADX) was developed by J. Welles Wilder Jr. and as its name implies attempts to measure the strength of the direction the security is moving in.
ADX is measured in a scale from 0-100 with readings above 25 indicating that you are in a trend whilst readings below 25 indicate that you are not in a trend.
As the scale is measured from 0-100 it doesn't matter if the
trend is up or down, the scale and reading are still from 0-100 e.g. if you
were in a strong down trend the reading might be 45. You might get the exact
same reading if you were in a strong up trend. The reason I mention this is
that many of my students get confused when first introduced to ADX and see the
indicator
rising as the trend goes down.
Wilder himself admitted that ''Directional movement is the most fascinating concept I have ever studied'' 'New Concepts In Technical Trading Systems'. Readings of over 60 are fairly rare in my observations and once they are at the extremes can actually mean the direction is getting ready for a change.
My Own use Of ADX
I highly recommend this little technique. You may not get that many signals but when you do they will be high probability. I like to use a 21 period moving average on the time period I am trading.
First the ADX must be 30 or over, no action is taken unless the ADX has achieved this reading.
Next the security must retrace to its 21 period moving average.
Once these two conditions have been met you can enter the market. Once in the market keep two things in mind.
The same goes for the short trade. You have a reading of 30 or above and it makes a new low. It then pulls back to the 21 period moving average and you enter short. Your first target should be the previous low or monitor closely at that price level.