point & figure c

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pfc Buy and Sell Chart Partterns The Basic Chart Patterns Point and Figure charting is unique in that it plots price against changes in direction by plotting a column of Xs as the price rises and a column of Os as the price falls. This method of recording price changes causes recurring patterns of Xs and Os in p&f charts. These patterns range from very simple to very complex patterns. The most basic of all patterns are the Simple Buy and Simple Sell, also called the Double Top and Double Bottom patterns. The Simple Buy pattern, as shown in the figure below, occurs when the current X column rises one box higher than the top X in the prior column of Xs. The simple buy pattern is both an entry point for a long position and stop-loss point for shorts. The Simple Sell pattern, as shown in the figure below, comprised of two columns of Os and one intervening column of Xs, occurs when teh current column of Os falls one box below the lowest O of the prior column. The simple sell pattern signals the traders to liquidate long positions and to short the security. Simple Buy Simple Sell The Complex Buy and Sell Patterns There are eight buy and sell patterns that are considered useful, including the simple buy and sell patterns. The Buy Signals Page 1 of 11 Buy and Sell Chart Partterns 24-Oct-14 ms-its:C:\Program Files\Numeral Technology LLC\Point & Figure Charts\Docs\PFCHelp....

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Page 1: Point & Figure C

pfc

Buy and Sell Chart Partterns

The Basic Chart Patterns

Point and Figure charting is unique in that it plots price against changes in direction by plotting a column of Xs as the price rises and a column of Os

as the price falls. This method of recording price changes causes recurring patterns of Xs and Os in p&f charts. These patterns range from

very simple to very complex patterns.

The most basic of all patterns are the Simple Buy and Simple Sell, also

called the Double Top and Double Bottom patterns. The Simple Buy pattern, as shown in the figure below, occurs when the current X column

rises one box higher than the top X in the prior column of Xs. The simple buy pattern is both an entry point for a long position and stop-loss point

for shorts. The Simple Sell pattern, as shown in the figure below, comprised of two columns of Os and one intervening column of Xs, occurs

when teh current column of Os falls one box below the lowest O of the prior column. The simple sell pattern signals the traders to liquidate long

positions and to short the security.

Simple Buy Simple Sell

The Complex Buy and Sell Patterns

There are eight buy and sell patterns that are considered useful, including the simple buy and sell patterns.

The Buy Signals

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Page 2: Point & Figure C

B-1--Simple Bullish Buy signal (or Double Top)

The most basic of all signals, the Simple Bullish Buy signal, is formed by a

column of Xs, then a column of Os, then a column of Xs. This is the

Simple Buy above.

B-2--Simple Bullish Buy with a Rising Bottom

The Simple Bullish Buy with a Rising Bottom is similar to B-1 except the bottoms of the B-1 and B-2 differ. In B-2,the bottom O in the most recent

column of Os is higher than the lowest O of the preceding O column, which is not present in B-1. Having rising bottoms means support is coming into

the market at progressively higher prices with each decline, and that makes the signal stronger than the B-1 which does not have rising

bottoms.

B-3--Breakout of a Triple Top

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Page 3: Point & Figure C

The Breakout of a Triple Top Pattern is composed of five columns, three Xs and two Os. The first two columns of Xs peak at the same level, while the

current X column rises one box higher than the tops of the prior two columns.

B-4--Ascending Triple Top

The Ascending Triple Top is actually two simple bullish signals (B-1 and/or B-2)given in succession in five columns. If the bottoms are rising along

with the rising tops, it's more bullish than if the bottoms are horizontal.

B-5--Spread Triple Top

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Page 4: Point & Figure C

The Spread Triple Top is similar to the Breakout of a Triple Top (B-3)except that it is spread over seven rather than five columns because one rally

failed to match or exceed the highs of the prior X columns and it thus takes an additional X column to break the horizontal resistance.

B-6--Upside Breakout above a BullishTiangle

The Upside Breakout above a BullishTiangle is created by resistance (supply) coming into the market at progressively lower levels with each

rally, thus keeping each succeeding column of Xs from rising as high as the prior column, while support (demand) comes in at progressively higher

levels with each decline as revealed by rising bottoms. A buy signal is generated when the upside breakout occurs, which means a column of Xs

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Page 5: Point & Figure C

rises one box higher than the high of the preceding X column. The triangle

is bullish because the last signal prior to the start of the triangle was a buy signal.

B-7--Upside Breakout above a Bullish Resistance Line

The resistance line in the Upside Breakout above a Bullish Resistance Line is drawn as a 45 degree line up and to the right beginning from the lower

right hand corner of the lowest box containing an O not bordered by an X on its right. The longer the resistance line holds, i.e. the mroe columns of

xs that approach the resistance line but fail to break through, the more bullish the ultimate breakout.

B-8--Upside Breakout above a Bearish Resistance Line

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Page 6: Point & Figure C

In the Upside Breakout above a Bearish Resistance Line, the security is in a steady decline, trading within a bearish channel defined by an upper

resistance line and a lower support line both moving down at a 45 degree angle as they extend from left to right. The buy signal occurs when an X

column both breaks through the resistance line and rises one box higher than the highest X of the prior column.

The Sell Signals

Based on Point and Figure's symmetry, all sell signals are the exact

opposite of the buy signals. There are eight types of sell signals.

S-1--Simple Bearish Sell

The Simple Bearish Sell signal occurs when the prices falls, rises and falls

again with the current decline or current column of Os dropping one box below the lowest O of the prior column of Os. When the Simple Sell occurs,

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Page 7: Point & Figure C

it suggests that the traders close out their longs, also consider a short sale

if prefer.

S-2--Simple Bearish Sell with a Declining Top

The Simple Bearish Sell with a Declining Top is more bearish than Simple

Sell (S-1), because it has a declining top as evidence that selling pressure is coming in at lower levels.

S-3--Breakout of a Triple Bottom

The Breakout of a Triple Bottom evolves from a price decline, an upside reversal, a second decline that meets downside support at the same level

as the lowest O of the prior declining column, a second rally which fails to break out on the upside and a third decline which drops one box below the

lowest Os of the prior two columns.

S-4 Descending Triple Bottom

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Page 8: Point & Figure C

The Descending Triple Bottom is composed of a column of Os, a rally of Xs,

a second column of Os which declines one box below the low of the prior declining column, followed by a second price rise succeeded by a third

decline signalling the sell by fallling one box below the low of the prior decline.

S-5--Spread Triple Bottom

The Spread Triple Bottom has the basic triple bottom design of the S-3, but the formation is spread over seven rather than five columns.

S-6--Downside Breakout of a Bearish Triangle

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Page 9: Point & Figure C

The Downside Breakout of a Bearish Triangle originates from an earlier sell

signal followed by a major decline. After the decline, support develops and a rally occurs which finally gives way to a new decline that bottoms higher

than the low of the prior declining column. The next rally falls short of the high of the preceding rally and the price again declines. The formation is

completed and a sell signal generated when an O column declines below the lower support line

S-7--Downside Breakout Below a Bullish Support

Line

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Page 10: Point & Figure C

The Downside Breakout Below a Bullish Support Line occurs when there is a downward penetration of a well defined bullish support line.The bullish

support line is the 45 degree best-fit line of bottoms and the the penetration must completely clear the support line, not just touch or

straddle the box through which it crosses from lower left to upper right, as well as decline one box below the lowest O of the prior column.

S-8--Downside Breakout Below a Bearish Support Line

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Page 11: Point & Figure C

©2013. All Rights Reserved.

The Downside Breakout Below a Bearish Support Line evolves from a sudden breakout below a bearish support line running from upper left to

lower right at a 45 degree angle which held repeatedly in the past.

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