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Introduction
Still growing
amongst the Western and European traders, the
Ichimoku Cloud (or Ichimoku Kinko Hyo = One
Glance Balance Cloud Chart) was originally
developed pre-WWII by a man named Goichi
Hosada. Because of the war, his research was
halted and then later finished in 1968 whereby
he published a 1,000 page, 4 volume body of
work releasing the Ichimoku Cloud to the world
under the pen-name Ichimoku Sanjin.
Originally built for the Japanese stock
markets, the indicator has made its way out of
the land of the Eastern sun and into the
trading world at large, being applied and used
widely in the Commodities, Futures, Options and
Forex markets. Part of its success is its
ability to find trends and reversals well
before they begin.
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The
Indicator
The Ichimoku Cloud has several
components which give it a lot of versatility and uses.
The most unique aspect of the indicator is its
‘Kumo’ or cloud which offers a unique
perspective of support and resistance. Most western
methods look at support and resistance in a linear
fashion or as straight lines in the sand (e.g.
Fibonacci, Pivots, Channel Lines, Trend Lines). However
the Kumo or cloud is an ever evolving object which was
designed to represent support and resistance based upon
price action. Generally, when you are in a strong
upward trend, the support is strong as the price levels
below have been accepted. The same goes for a strong
downtrend and having more layers of resistance. Below
are two examples of up and downtrends – showing
how the Kumo was quite thick in nature.
The most important way to look at the
Kumo is as support and resistance – meaning if
it is thick, then the support/resistance (depending
upon where price is in relationship to the cloud) is
strong. If price is above the Kumo, we are in a general
uptrend or would want to look for more buying
opportunities. If price is below the cloud, it is below
resistance (the Kumo) and we want to be searching for
more shorts than longs. The longer price stays
below/above the cloud, the stronger the trend we are in
and the more support/resistance the Kumo will offer.
Kumo Composition
There are two main lines of the Kumo
which are referred to as Senkou Span A and Senkou Span
B. For the purposes of efficiency, we will refer to
them as Span A and Span B. The space or value in
between these two lines is what forms the Kumo.
Span A is formed by
taking the Tenkan Line and adding it to the Kijun Line
(white and red lines respectively from chart above),
then dividing that value by 2 and plotting it 26
periods ahead. The formula is;
(Tenkan Line + Kijun Line) / 2 placed
26 periods ahead
Span B is formed by
taking the highest high (over the last 52 periods),
adding to it the lowest low (over the last 52 periods),
dividing that by 2 and plotting that 26 time periods
ahead. The formula is;
(Highest High + Lowest Low for the last
52 periods) / 2 and plotted 26 time periods ahead.
We will talk about some important
points regarding the construction of the Kumo later.
Other Ichimoku
Components
(Tenkan, Kijun and Chikou Span
Lines)
The Tenkan Line or
Tenkan Sen (Sen means line in Japanese) is known as the
conversion line or turning line is similar to a 9SMA
but actually is quite different. Remember a SMA (simple
moving average) will smooth out all the data and make
it equal but the Tenkan Line will take the highest high
and lowest low over the last 9 periods. The explanation
for this is Hosada felt price action and its extremes
were more important than smoothing any data because
price action represented where buyers/sellers entered
and directed the market, thus being more important than
averaging or smoothing the data out. As you can see by
the chart below, the Tenkan Line is quite different
than a 9SMA. Because the TL (Tenkan Line) uses price
instead of an averaging or the closing prices, it
mirrors price better and is more representative of it.
You can see this when the TL flattens in small portions
to move with price and its moments of ranging.
Akin to all moving averages, the angle
of the Tenkan line is very important as the sharper the
angle, the stronger the trend while the flatter the
Tenkan, the flatter or lesser the momentum of the move
is. However, it is important to not use the Tenkan line
as a gauge of the trend but more so the momentum of the
move. However, it can act as the first line of defense
in a trend and a breaking of it in the opposite
direction of the move can often be a sign of the
defenses weakening.
The Kijun Line (or Kijun Sen) is known
as the datum line, standard line or trend line designed
to indicate the overall trend for the instrument or
pair. The formula behind it is the same as the Tenkan
line using price action and the highest high + lowest
low with the only change being in the periods as it
does it over the last 26 periods.
Why 26 periods? The answer to that is a
matter of history. When the Ichimoku was first created,
the Japanese markets were open 6 days a week on
Saturdays. If the markets are open 6 days a week, this
generally results in 26 trading days for the month
– hence 26 periods for the Kijun. In essence,
what it was meant to be was a measure of the highest
high + lowest low for the last month of price action.
If the Kijun has been climbing – it means price
has been gaining ground for the last month. If it is
flat, then it will be the midpoint of the range of
price for the last month of price action (or
representative of the price equilibrium).
Also like the Tenkan Line, the angle of
the Kijun is reflective of the overall trend in place.
Price breaking the Kijun after being in an up/down
trend often has serious consequences for that trend and
can many times lead to a reversal of sorts. Ultimately
because it uses a longer period to measure price
action, its a more stable method for determining the
direction of the trend than the Tenkan Line. Because of
price to respect this line during a strong trend, it
can potentially be used as a stop loss for traders
already in the correct direction of the trend. Hence,
when price breaks or closes below it by a significant
amount, the trend is often over.
The Chikou Span or
lagging line is created by taking the current closing
price for the instrument and shifted 26 time periods
back, hence why it is a lagging line. This is a strange
concept and not something usually seen in technical
indicators which makes the Ichimoku Cloud even more
unique. The purpose is simply to gain perspective in
regards to how the current price action is in
relationship to previous price action.
The main application for giving
perspective to the trader is how does the Chikou Span
relate to price 26 periods ago. If the Chikou Span is
lower than price 26 periods ago, then there is
resistance for the current upmove or pressure which
could force price down into a bearish move. However if
the Chikou Span is above price from 26 periods ago,
then it would mean there is little or no resistance
ahead since price is in the process of making new highs
and there is no recent price above it – thus
paving the way for a strong trend.
Applications for the Tenkan and
Kijun
The most common usage of the Tenkan and
Kijun are the ‘cross’ or what we call the
TKx (Tenkan-Kijun Cross). Similar to how a MACD uses a
cross of its two lines, the Ichimoku Cloud does the
same. It is interesting to note that the Ichimoku uses
the same periods as the MACD, however it was created
over a decade earlier.
One of the main signals for Ichimoku
traders, the TKx can often indicate when a trend is
about to begin by forming a cross (upward cross =
possible upward trend while downward cross = possible
down trend). A generic upward cross can be used as a
bullish signal (or exit for people already short) and a
generic downward cross can be used as a generic bearish
signal (and vice versa for current bulls). However,
notice we used the term ‘generic’ meaning
there is more to the cross.
Hosada was able to give a further
definition to the cross based upon its position to the
Kumo or cloud. If the cross was below the Kumo, then it
was considered a ‘weak’ signal since the
cross was below the Kumo or below resistance. A medium
signal was when a cross happened inside the Kumo as it
was occurring within the field of support/resistance. A
strong signal was when the bullish cross happened above
the Kumo as it was happening after clearing resistance.
The opposite is true for bearish signals whereby a weak
signal is a cross above the Kumo, while a medium signal
is inside the Kumo and a strong signal below the Kumo.
One important reminder to all this is to make sure you
reference the Chikou Span to see how current price is
in relationship to previous price action.
The nature of the cross usually
indicates the overall strength or potential for the
move but it should be noted strong trends have
developed from weak crosses. It is always also
important you reference the construction of the Kumo
when trading the typical TKx signals.
Some Important Final Notes on
the Kumo
As we talked about before, the Kumo is
designed to represent support and resistance but it has
a host of implications in doing such. To review, the
thicker the Kumo, the stronger the support/resistance
it will offer. Price will often reject off of the Kumo
only to resume the current trend as depicted below by a
few examples.
What this also means is if the Kumo is
exceptionally thin, in a ranging market it likely means
the range will continue as their is neither enough
support or resistance to hold a single direction for
the pair. What it also means is if we are in a current
trend and price is approaching a thin Kumo, the chances
increase for a trend reversal since the
support/resistance offered by the Kumo is not
significant. This is why Kumo analysis is important as
it can often lead to reversals and inform us in the
future of pending trend changes.
Also, there is a common formation
in the Kumo called the ‘flat top or
bottom’. This refers to when the Span B
becomes flat. Remember the Span B is composed
of the last 52 candles absolute highest high
and lowest low – thus referring to price
action over the last 52 periods. If Span B is
flat, the only way it can do that is if price
has not extended to make any new significant
highs or lows. This means we are in a range and
the tendency of a range is to move towards
equilibrium or towards the center of the range
– also known as the value area for
price. The end result is during a ranging
environment, the Span B is the virtual 50%
fibonacci retracement level for that range and
is the ever changing 50% fib level for a
trending environment, dividing the last 52
candles into two halves, the upper and lower
half.
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What does this mean for traders? If
price is inside the Kumo, it will have a tendency to
gravitate towards the flat top/bottom. If price is
above it, the tendency of price will be to gravitate
towards the flat top/bottom, often using it as a
springboard for a rejection off of it.
Lastly, one of the most important
things about the Kumo is what happens when price breaks
it. If we have been in a strong trend for sometime and
price then breaks the Kumo, it usually represents a
trend change and the likelihood of a large move about
to begin in the direction of the break as you can see
by the examples below.
It is because the Kumo is always
changing shape that it can represent a much better
perspective of support and resistance. It is
essentially based upon price action and changing shape
based upon previous price moves. This makes it a little
more sensitive and representational to price unlike
static forms of support and resistance (fibonacci
retracement levels, pivots, trend lines, etc) which do
not move at all once they are in place. It is its
unique construction which allows the Kumo to be both
Static and Dynamic in giving support/resistance levels
to the trader.
In Closing
This is just the beginning of the
Ichimoku Cloud and designed to give the trader an
introduction to the key elements around such a
fascinating indicator and method for trading the
markets. The Ichimoku Cloud has the ability to detect
trends, reversals, support/resistance levels, trend
strength/weakness and momentum for a pair. It is due to
its ability to be used in multiple environments, along
with its unique perspective upon price and
support/resistance levels that Institutional and retail
traders have gravitated towards using this method.
By:
Chris Capre
Founder
Second Skies
LLC
This article is
intended solely for information purposes. The opinions
are those of the author only. Please conduct further
research and consult your financial advisor before
making any investment/trading decision. No
responsibility can be accepted for losses that may
result as a consequence of trading on the basis of this
analysis.
Information, charts or
examples contained in this lesson are for illustration
and educational purposes only. It should not be
considered as advice or a recommendation to buy or sell
any security or financial instrument. We do not and
cannot offer investment advice. For further information
please read our .
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