StockCharts Insider: What Kind of Chart Analyst Are You?
Before We Dive In…
Charting isn’t a one-size-fits-all activity. All traders have their own goals and unique approaches. In this guide, you’ll get a quick-hit overview of a few major chart analysis styles. You’ll learn what drives each style, the tools they use, and the pros and cons of each. Take a look and see whether one resonates with your own trading personality.
Today's Insider Tip: Know your charting "style" and focus on its strengths.
A Guide to the Major Styles of Technical Trading
When it comes to analyzing charts, everyone’s wired differently. Some like to ride trends. Others have a knack for spotting patterns. Some chase momentum. Others like to decipher candlesticks.
What you’re about to read is a lightning round of the major tribes of chart analysis. I’ll present you with a bulleted summary of the main ideas, tools, and pros and cons of each approach, followed by a short commentary. Maybe one or a few might resonate with you, or perhaps you’ll want to mix and match several approaches.
Trend Followers
- Core idea: The trend is your friend (until it ends).
- A few go-to tools: Moving Averages, Trendlines, MACD, ADX, Ichimoku Cloud, etc.
- Game plan: Identify the trend, buy breakouts or pullbacks, ride until the trend is over.
- Strengths: Can yield huge returns when markets are trending.
- Weaknesses: Choppy markets can fake you out, leading to whipsaws and drawdowns.
Trend following is a classic approach that lends itself well to longer-term position trading. Of course, there are shorter trends as well, and these are what swing traders typically trade. The main things to watch out for here are whipsaws.
Longer-term trend following approaches that are always in the market (going long and short) can generate big returns, but they may also come with many smaller losses and large drawdowns when markets move sideways. A longer-term approach requires patience, higher risk tolerance, and adequate capital to pull it off. If not, a shorter swing trading approach might be more suitable. It’s up to you. Study and backtest it thoroughly before jumping in.
Pattern Hunters
- Core idea: Classic price patterns tend to repeat themselves.
- A few go-to tools: An entire set of patterns like Triangles, Rectangles, Head & Shoulders, Cup & Handle, and hundreds more.
- Game plan: Spot the pattern and wait for a breakout.
- Strengths: Clear setups, rules, success/failure stats, and timing make this approach particularly effective.
- Weakness: Real-world patterns can sometimes be messy, making them harder to spot or trust.
Spotting a classic pattern in its “textbook” form can be quite exhilarating. This means the pattern is super clear and meets all of the requirements. In the real world, pattern shapes aren’t always clear, and they don’t always check all the boxes to meet classic criteria. This can get tricky because you now have to decide whether to trust the pattern or not.
Plus, even the most pristine patterns can fail. But the good news is that the classic approach to these patterns comes with complete setups, such as various exit points for when they fail, and price targets for when they succeed.
Momentum Traders
- Core idea: Strong momentum precedes strong price moves.
- A few go-to tools: RSI, Stochastic Oscillator, Rate of Change (ROC), MACD, etc.
- Game plan: Buy when momentum strengthens, sell when momentum significantly fades.
- Strengths: Spotting momentum changes can help you get into big price moves early.
- Weaknesses: Momentum shifts, especially in a sideways market, can be brutal, generating lots of false signals.
All big moves in the market require strong momentum and volume to drive and sustain them. That’s why strong momentum and volume precede large swings. However, momentum can be volatile, depending on what’s going on in the market and the broader economy.
Sudden developments, news events, economic reports, and other factors can quickly shift market sentiment and momentum, either in your favor or against it. So, if you’re going to adopt this approach, you’ll have to keep an eye on the market and be able to make quick decisions if momentum happens to shift against your position.
Candlestick Pattern Traders
- Core idea: Candlesticks reveal what traders are thinking, giving you actionable insights that have been historically consistent.
- Go-to tools: Classic patterns like Doji, Engulfing, Hammer, and Shooting Star patterns, among many others. These can also be combined with other indicators.
- Game plan: Analyze the psychology behind price movements, spot turning points, and continuations in the market.
- Strengths: Allows for quick pattern recognition from shorter to longer timeframes.
- Weaknesses: Single candles can be insufficient or ambiguous, often requiring other indicators.
Once you master the universe of candlestick patterns, not only are the patterns easy to spot, but each will tell you a story about what the market was thinking as it formed the patterns. There’s something powerful about reading an entire session’s activity from a single candle.
Still, there are other factors affecting a market. While candlesticks can give a strong clue, you may have to use other tools to confirm the story, especially if you’re going to put your money on it.
Trading Range Scalpers
- Core idea: Prices historically tend to trade sideways between 60% to 80% of the time (this is the core assumption).
- A few go-to tools: Support & Resistance Zones, Bollinger Bands, Keltner Channels, and Stochastic Oscillator, among others.
- Game plan: When prices are stuck in a trading range, buy the extreme lows and sell the extreme highs.
- Strengths: Effective when the market is not trending and stuck within a definable range.
- Weaknesses: Lows and highs are not always clear-cut, price can exceed support and resistance before reversing, and strong breakouts can kill the trade (and hurt your account).
If markets trade within a definable range between 60% to 80% of the time, that opens the door to plenty of scalping opportunities. Small wins can stack up. And while you can stick to long-only setups, many scalpers play both sides, going long and short, to maximize a range-bound formation.
But there’s a catch: Price doesn’t always respect support and resistance levels; it can push beyond them, sometimes by a lot, before reversing. That makes stop-loss placements tricky, and this is where it can get frustrating: Getting stopped out only to see price reverse and move in your original direction.
In the worst-case scenario, price may break out of the range. When it does, it often happens with speed and force. If your stop is too wide or non-existent, you can take a big hit. So be careful with this high-risk strategy.
And That’s a Wrap
There are other chart analysis approaches, of course. Many traders will even fuse these approaches or master a few of them to match different market scenarios. Find what clicks with your mindset, timeframe, and risk tolerance. Whatever you decide, StockCharts has the tools for pretty much all of it.