BTW, Investor RT has great Renko charts.....I use it for some of my trading charts......... http://www.linnsoft.com/renko/
The basic premise of your question is flawed.Quote from 1a2b3cppp:
With perfect execution, the largest amount you could lose trading on a renko chart would be 2 * the box size, right?
Say you're using a 5 point box. A green box forms. Go long. Price immediately reverses, confirmation that trend was wrong and a red box appears. You exit. That's 10 points you've lost right?
edit - How come multiple renko boxes appear all with the same timestamp. Did price really move 20 points at exactly 10:30 (or whatever example)???
Quote from MandelbrotSet:
The basic premise of your question is flawed.
Renko bars (range bars, volume bars, etc) do not capture the trend, at best they will show you price momentum.
So your qustion should be "how do you capture the trend, and then what do you use to show momentum?
They are two completely different things.Quote from 1a2b3cppp:
How do you define trend if it's different than "price momentum"?
Quote from 1a2b3cppp:
I would define trend as the direction in which price is moving, which *should be* clearly illustrated on a Renko chart.
I would definie momentum as the speed at which price is moving (in the direction of the trend.
If price is taking forever and going up 1 point per 5 minutes, that's slow momentum.
It's it's shooting straight up like what happened this afternoon then that would be high momentum.
So I guess by my definition, momentum is "the speed at which renko boxes are appearing" and trend is "whether the boxes are green or red."