Raw market data coming from an exchange is essentially unreadable to the human eye. It is a continuous stream of numbers in which hundreds of executed orders, their exact time, price, and volume are recorded every second. In order to find logic in this chaos, we need to apply a filter to the data – a market chart. However, the choice of this filter is not merely a matter of aesthetics or personal taste. Each type of price display processes raw information differently.
Japanese candlesticks
The most widespread and historically most popular way of visualizing the market is clearly Japanese candlesticks. Their strength lies in the fact that within a single graphical element they can display four key values for a predetermined time period: the opening price (Open), the highest achieved price (High), the lowest price (Low), and the closing price (Close).
Whether you are watching a minute, hourly, or daily chart, the X-axis remains relentless and moves forward with every tick of the clock. Although these candlesticks are ideal for reading market psychology through classic formations, they hide a fundamental weakness. The time frame functions like a black box. From the candlestick itself, you cannot tell whether most trades took place right in the first minute of its formation or only in the final seconds before it closed.
Heikin-Ashi
At first glance, a Heikin-Ashi chart looks almost identical to classic Japanese candlesticks, but the difference is hidden in the details and in the mathematics. Unlike the standard display, Heikin-Ashi values are not calculated from pure market prices, but use a modified formula based on averages from the previous period.
The result is a visually clean chart in which the chaotic alternation of green and red colors during smaller price corrections disappears. This tool works as an excellent dampener of market noise. When the market is clearly rising, Heikin-Ashi draws an uninterrupted series of green candlesticks without lower shadows, which helps traders keep their emotions under control and avoid closing profitable positions too early. The price for this calming effect, however, is a slight delay, because of which this chart is not suitable for precise timing of entries at reversal points.
Renko chart
If you want to completely remove the stress of passing time from the analysis, Renko charts are the solution. This approach, derived from the Japanese word for brick, completely ignores hours and minutes. A new brick is drawn on the chart only when the price overcomes a precisely defined distance, for example ten points or dollars.
The horizontal axis therefore loses its traditional chronological meaning. In practice, this means that during nighttime lethargy or in the middle of holiday trading, the chart may not move for several hours. However, once massive volatility arrives in the market, several bricks may be added one after another within a single minute. Renko charts radically cut away any noise and reveal the clean structure of the market, making them an ideal tool for precisely defining key support and resistance levels.
Tick charts
Intraday traders and scalpers who need to see the speed of the market in real time often abandon minute intervals in favor of tick charts. In this display, a new bar is not drawn after five or ten minutes have passed, but after an exact number of transactions has been executed – for example after every two thousand trades, regardless of how much volume passed through them.
The strength of a tick chart is reflected in its ability to adapt to market activity. During the market open, when a huge number of orders flows into the market, the chart moves at lightning speed and generates dozens of bars, thereby mapping the battle between supply and demand in detail. Conversely, during the lunch break, the formation of the chart almost stops. At times of low liquidity, the trader therefore does not receive false trading signals, which are almost the rule with ordinary time-based charts.
Footprint charts
The highest league of modern market analysis is represented by so-called Footprint, or cluster charts. While all previous types observe price from the outside, Footprint functions like an X-ray. It takes a classic Japanese candlestick and breaks it down into individual price micro-levels.
Directly inside the body of the candlestick, it then displays the exact volume of contracts that were traded on the ask side (Ask) and the bid side (Bid). This type of visualization reveals the so-called Order Flow – the real flow of orders. The trader no longer has to guess what is happening in the market. Directly on the screen, they can see whether the price is being pushed upward by an aggressive buyer or whether the rise has stopped because of a massive passive barrier of limit orders placed there by an institutional player.
Synthesis: Choosing the right optics for your style
The world of market charts has no clear winner and no universally best tool. Success in trading and investing does not lie in searching for the holy grail, but in understanding what information a particular filter provides and what it hides. A long-term swing trader may find stability in the mathematical smoothing of Heikin-Ashi or in the structural clarity of Renko charts. Conversely, a person who executes dozens of trades a day needs the dynamics of ticks and a detailed look under the hood in the form of Footprint. The most effective approach is therefore often a combination.
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