The Ichimoku Cloud is a technical indicator represented as a cloud on a price chart, providing a snapshot of the general market trend. It defines support and resistance levels, gauges momentum and provides possible trading signals.
Developed by Japanese journalist Goichi Hosoda, the Ichimoku Cloud was first published in 1969. Called the ‘Ichimoku Kinko Hyo’ in Japanese, it roughly translates to ‘one-look equilibrium chart’; a befitting description since, with just one look, traders can get a good amount of information.
When working with this indicator, there will be five lines on the price chart. The ‘cloud’ will form between two of these lines – called the Senkou Spans. Let’s dive into the different lines that make up the indicator:
To interpret the Ichimoku Cloud, you must remember that it’ll give you limited information on market trends. You need to supplement this information with robust technical and fundamental analysis before opening a position.
First – the cloud. The Ichimoku Cloud itself will appear red when the market price is in a downtrend and green when it’s in an uptrend.
Secondly, you can use the base line to determine price momentum in the short term. A crossover of the Tenkan Sen (conversion line) above the Kijun Sen (base line) shows that the momentum of the price level is increasing. When the Tenkan Sen is above the Kijun Sen, it’s indicative of a buy signal. When it’s the other way around, it’s a possible sell signal.
If the price level is above the base line (Kijun Sen), it means the market price has a bias to go upwards, since it’s above the 26-period mid-point price. In this instance, the cloud is seen as a support or resistance barrier.
When the Chikou Span – which indicates market sentiment – shows a decline in the price of the asset, it shows that the market is bearish. The opposite is true when the span is above the market price.
The Ichimoku Cloud can be used in combination with other technical indicators such as the relative strength index (RSI). The RSI will help you to identify the momentum of the market price. It’ll also help you identify overbought and oversold levels, and financial market signals that have divergence or hidden divergence.
There are several formulas used to calculate the Ichimoku Cloud, one for each line presented by the indicator.
Tenkan Sen =(Highest high+lowest low)/2 (for the past 9 periods)
Kijun Sen =(Highest high+lowest low)/2 (for the past 26 periods)
Chikou span = Most current closing price (for the last 26 periods)
Senkou Span A =(Tenkan line+Kijun line)/2 (plotted 26 periods ahead)
Senkou span B =(Highest high+lowest low)/2 (for the past 52 periods,plotted 26 periods ahead)
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