Renko chart
A Renko chart[1] (Japanese: 練行足, romanized: renkōashi, also written 練り足 neriashi) is a type of financial chart of Japanese origin used in technical analysis that measures and plots price changes. A renko chart consists of bricks (煉瓦, renga), which proponents say more clearly show market trends and increase the signal-to-noise ratio compared to typical candlestick charts.[2]
Construction
[edit]Renko charting is similar to point-and-figure in that time doesn't play a role in Renko charts. Renko blocks (or bricks) are plotted using the following rules:[3]
- A brick size is determined, e.g. 10 points. All bricks are drawn to be of that size.
- Once the price surpasses the lower or upper border of the current brick by the brick size, a new brick is drawn either above or below the previous one — never on the same line.
- The new brick is always drawn farther to the right on the horizontal axis.
- If the price surpasses the previous brick by more than one chosen size, the respective number of bricks is plotted on the chart.
- Partial bricks are not plotted until complete brick size distance is covered by the price.
- Renko charts typically only use closing prices based on the chart time frame chosen. For example, if using a weekly time frame, then weekly closing prices will be used to construct the bricks.
Similarly to Kagi charts, Renko charts help chartists to cancel out the noise present on time-based charts, focus on important price levels, detect support and resistance, and identify market trends.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Nison, Steve (1994-11-10). Beyond Candlesticks: New Japanese Charting Techniques Revealed. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780471007203.
- ^ Mitchell, Cory. "Renko Chart Definition and Uses". Investopedia. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
- ^ Mitchell, Cory. "How to Use Renko Charts in Your Trading". The Balance. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
- ^ "Renko Charts [ChartSchool]". school.stockcharts.com. Retrieved 2019-09-23.