This article is in need of attention. You can help Wikipedia by editing it into a better article. Please also consider changing this notice to be more specific. | The Gann Angles are named after W. D. Gann, a 20th century market theorist. Gann described the use of the angles in the stock market in The Basis of My Forecasting Method, a 33-page course written in 1935. (19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the 20th century was that century which lasted from 1901–2000 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar (1900–1999 in the...
Street markets such as this one in Rue Mouffetard, Paris are still common in France. ...
The New York Stock Exchange The stock market is the market for the trading of company stock, both those securities listed on a stock exchange as well as those only traded privately. ...
1935 was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Calculating a Gann angle is equivalent to finding the derivative of a particular line on a chart in a simple way. In mathematics, the derivative is one of the two central concepts of calculus. ...
Angles Described
Each geometrical angle (which is really a line extended into space) divides time and price into proportionate parts. The most important angle Gann called the 1x1 or the 45° angle, which he said represented one unit of price for one unit of time. If you draw a perfect square and then draw a diagonal line from one corner of the square to the other, you have illustrated the concept of the 1x1 angle, which moves up one point per day. Other important angles were the 2x1 (moving up two points per day), the 3x1, the 4x1, the 8x1, and the 16x1. When the angles are drawn in a group, they are often called a Gann fan. Angles may either be drawn ascending from price bottoms, as just described, or descending from price tops.
Using the Angles Gann watched for important tops and bottoms to form on a daily, weekly, or monthly chart and drew his angles from these changes in trend. When the trend is up and the price stays in the space above an ascending angle without breaking below it, the market is strong; when the trend is down and the price remains below a descending angle without breaking above it, the market is weak. The market shows its relative strength or weakness according to the angle it is above or below. For example, if the price is above the 2x1 the market has shown itself to be much more bullish than if it is above the 1x1. In his angles course, Gann argues that when an uptrending price reverses and breaks under an ascending angle, the tendency of the price is to go to the next nearest angle below it; likewise, when a downtrending price reverses and breaks up through a descending angle, the tendency of the price is to go to the next nearest angle above it.
Question of Scale It is not always practical to give the 1x1 a value of 1 point of price for each day, as Gann observed in his course. Let us say that the Dow Jones Industrial Average is trading around 10,000 points at the time we are analyzing it. It is obviously not useful to draw a 1x1 along a chart of 10,000 days! In such cases, Gann said that we must devise another scale, in which we posit that a certain number of points taken together (for example, 100 or 1,000) is to be considered a single price unit in the 1x1 angle, the same as a $100 or $1,000 bill could be considered a single bill. Critics note, however, that Gann did not set down rules for determining how many points should be considered a single unit in such cases. This leads opponents of Gann theory to say that the positioning of the angles on a chart is entirely arbitrary and not scientific.
Resolution of Scale What is practical however is to give the 1x1 value its corresponding angular value. A line drawn from the base of a price chart at a 45 degree angle would then correspond to the 1x1 Gann angle at any chosen scale.
External links - Technical Analysis from A to Z by Steven B. Achelis
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