AccumulativeSwingIndex
AdvanceDeclineRatio
ADX
ArmsIndexTRIN
Aroon
BollingerBands
CommodityChannelIndex
ChaikenMoneyFlow
CommoditySelectIndex
DetrendedPriceOscillator
DMI
EaseofMovement
ElliotWave
ExponentialRibbon
Fibonnacci
FloorTraderPivots
GannTheory
HewlettUpDown
HPI
KeltnerChannel
MACD
MarketThrust
MassIndex
McClellanOsc
Momentum
MoneyFlowIndex
MovingAverageEnvelope
OnBalanceVolume
OpenInterest
ParabolicSAR
PointFigureChart
Gaps
WilliamsR
ZigZag
VolumeAccumulation
Volume
Volatility
VIXVIXN
UltimateOsc
UlcerIndex
TRIX
TimeSeriesForecast
SwingIndex
SupportResistance
StochasticRSI
Stochastics
StandardErrorBands
RSI
RateofChange
PriceVolTrend
Candlestick Charting
Classical Charting Patterns
Linear Regression
Moving Averages

Point & Figure Charting

Point & Figure Charting reduces the importance of time on a chart and instead focuses on price movements. Point & Figure charts are made up of X's and O's, X's being new highs and O's being new lows. There are two inputs to a Point & Figure chart:

  1. Box Size: The size of movement required to add an "X" or an "O". For example, a stock at a price of $20 may have a box size of $1. This means that an increase from $20.01 to a high of $21.34 means another "X" is added. If the high price only increased to $20.99, then another "X" is not added because the stock didn't close another box size ($1) more.
  2. Reversal Amount: The size of reversal before another column is added to a Point & Figure chart. To illustrate, if the reversal amount is $3, then the $20 stock would have to fall down to $17 before a new column (in this example of O's) would be started.

One of the main uses for Point & Figure charts, and the one emphasized in this section, is that Point & Figure charts make it easier for traders to see classic chart patterns. In the chart below of the E-mini S&P 500 Future, the Point & Figure chart emphasized support and resistance lines as well as areas of price breakouts:

Again, the Point & Figure chart makes it easy for traders to see the double bottom pattern below in the chart of the E-mini S&P 500 Futures contract:

The e-mini chart above illustrates the two bottoms of the double bottom pattern, as well as the confirmation line that is pierced, resulting in a buying opportunity.

Point & Figure is a very unique way to plot market action. The strongsuit of Point & Figure charting is that it eliminates the element of time and focuses on what is truly important - price.