Interpretation of Volume and Open Interest for All Markets
General Rules for
Interpreting Volume and Open Interest
The
futures technician incorporates volume and open interest
information into market analysis. The rules for the
interpretation of volume and open interest are generally
combined because they are so similar. There are,
however, some distinctions between the two that should
be addressed. We'll begin here with a statement of the
general rules for both. Having done that, we'll then
treat each one separately before combining them again
at the end.
If
volume and open interest are both increasing, then the
current price trend will probably continue in its
present direction (either up or down). If, however,
volume and open interest are declining, the action can
be viewed as a warning that the current price trend may
be nearing an end. Having said that, let's now take a
look at volume and open interest separately.
INTERPRETATION OF
VOLUME FOR ALL MARKETS
The
level of volume measures the intensity or urgency behind
the price move. Heavier volume reflects a higher degree
of intensity or pressure. By monitoring the level of
volume along with price action, the technician is better
able to gauge the buying or selling pressure behind
market moves. This information can then be used to
confirm price movement or warn that a price move is not
to be trusted.
To
state the rule more concisely, volume should increase or
expand in the direction of the existing price trend. In
an uptrend, volume should be heavier as the price moves
higher, and should decrease or contract on price dips.
As long as this pattern continues, volume is said to be
confirming the price trend.
The
chartist is also watching for signs of divergence
(there's that word again). Divergence occurs if the
penetration of a previous high by the price trend
takes place on declining volume. This action alerts
the chartist to diminishing buying pressure. If the
volume also shows a tendency to pick up on price
dips, the analyst begins to worry that the uptrend
is in trouble.