That's what makes it a market.I suppose it is just a matter of what you find out there that makes sense to your own head. Time-based charts I could never read properly. The renko-types suit me well.
That's what makes it a market.I suppose it is just a matter of what you find out there that makes sense to your own head. Time-based charts I could never read properly. The renko-types suit me well.
%%I once spent a couple of hundred hours looking at "point and figure" and reading about it, but thought better of it (still don't really know what I might be missing, there: some people swear by it - others swear at it).

%%Can you post an example of a volume chart? I'll be able to tell you straight away if i'd consider switching.

%% I meant ,horizontal rectangle[like a candle] , grid line [volume charts] not ''grid nine'' ,@ $242 area, SPY, 3 month charts%%
Yes,LovetheTrade, but lets use your charts, because my banker dad said ''dont tell everthing you know''
Click up a SPY 3 month, mountain [aka ,area]chart. NOW picture mountain peaks, on your mountain 3 month year chart; price volume draws like a candle,[ horizontal, not vertical candle]just like a grid nine on $242 area peaks/+, of most volume/price.
Since the crowd is wrong so much;
$242 volume candle/rectangle may not mean much- it could LOL![]()
I suspect not, realistically: they look superficially exactly the same as any other chart, anyway: the difference is simply in the inputs from which the bars/candles are constructed.
In other words, there's nothing about the appearance of the charts that would enable you to decide whether or not to use them: only your overall comparative results from using them for a statistically significant time can determine that.
Appearance is irrelevant, overall: only outcomes matter.
[I appreciate, of course, that you know this already, but for the benefit of anyone with less experience reading the thread, I'll just clarify that the closing of each bar/candle and the opening of the next is defined not by the passage of a specified unit of time (as with time charts) or by the transacting of a specified number of orders (as with tick charts), but by the transacting of a specified volume, and if a single, large order exceeds the instant bar's/candle's limit, it's shown effectively as if it were divided between two bars/candles.]
No doubt, volume-based charts could benefit the discretionary trader looking for a more simplified approach
and whether this comes at an opportunity cost or not will depend largely on one's effectiveness with either approach.
Do you use multi-volume charts to make your trading decisions?
I thought you were the lone-wolf discretionary trader...
The discussion is not as to additional volume analysis but the efficacy of volume based charts as opposed to time or transaction based.Volume analysis is too much information as it can be interpreted a thousand different ways.
It's especially prohibitive to newbies. What is more important is using a price/chart/indicator combo to provide direction. And of course the edge is Prudent Risk Management.
And that's volume analysis. ---It should be discarded.The discussion is not as to additional volume analysis but the efficacy of volume based charts as opposed to time or transaction based.