Japanese Candlesticks Charting
Candlestick
charts are the Japanese version of bar charting and have
become very popular in recent years among western
chartists. The Japanese candlestick records the same
four prices as the traditional bar chart-the open, the
close, the high, and the
low.
The visual presentation differs however. On the
candlestick chart, a thin line (called the shadow) shows
the day's price range from the high to the low. A wider
portion of the bar (called the real body) measures the
distance between the open and the close. If the close is
higher than the open, the real body is white (positive).
If the close is lower than the open, the real body is
black (negative).
The
key to candlestick charts is the relationship between
the open and the close. Possibly because of the growing
popularity of candlesticks, western chartists now pay a
lot more attention to the opening tic on their bar
charts. You can do everything with a candlestick chart
that you can do with a bar chart. In other words, all
the technical tools and indicators we'll be showing you
for the bar chart can also be used on candlesticks.
We'll show you later in how to construct bar
charts for weekly
and monthly periods. You
can do the same with candlesticks.