Volume analysis. Why is this important to learn?

Volume analysis. Why volumes are important

Why do professional traders pay so much attention to the trading volume? What is behind the Volume indicator? Why is the volume analysis important? We will try to answer these questions in this article in the popular-scientific form.

If you have never used the volume, you would, most probably, wish to try to include it into your trading system. You will definitely have some ideas on how to improve your efficiency after you read this article.

Read in this article:

  • What the way to the volume analysis starts with?
  • Specific feature of the simple volume indicator.
  • Advanced volume indicators.
  • Importance of the demand and supply law.
  • Advantages of the volume analysis.
  • Example of the volume analysis.

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What the way to the volume analysis starts with?

The first steps of beginner traders in the financial markets:

  1. registration with a Forex broker;
  2. opening a demo or real account (how to open an account on the exchange);
  3. downloading a terminal – MetaTrader or Quik (ATAS vs MetaTrader).

Then they start experimenting with strategies, looking for Grails and ‘walking on rakes’. Beginner traders fail to make a big profit fast, despite advertising promises of brokerage agencies, and they become disappointed. Their efforts to win back the growing losses by increasing the stakes result in blowing up the account.

A familiar story, isn’t it? (Read one in this article: The story of a real trader).

Many outsiders leave the market soon after just starting their careers (how to become a trader). The most motivated and persistent ones try to find out where the trouble lies. Thus, looking for truth, traders start to pay attention to the Volume indicator. What is it about?

What makes the volume indicator different?

The absolute majority of the technical analysis indicators (MA, MACD, Stoch, RSI, BBands, CCI and hundreds of others) use previous price values in their calculations.

Indicators based on price values

The picture above shows examples of indicators based on price values (screenshot from MetaTrader).

The Volume indicator is a completely different story. The specific feature of volumes is that they do not use the price and are not its derivative. Volumes do not pass through formulas and are delivered to the terminal:

  1. in tick terms (each tick represents 1 executed trade), or
  2. in absolute terms (a number of executed trades), or
  3. in money terms (a sum of the costs of executed trades).

The first volume type – tick volume – is well-known mostly to MetaTrader users. The volumes in the absolute and money terms are real volumes of the trades, which are provided by official exchanges in real time.

The clients of Forex brokers, who trade through MetaTrader, often ask whether it is possible to use the tick volume as an alternative of the real one. In principle, the tick volume could be used for the analysis of trades, since both tick and real volumes show the market ACTIVITY.

However, the use of real volumes provides a more accurate analysis, especially if we ‘look into’ the volume and split it into the buy and sell clusters at each price level. Progressive volume indicators provide for this ‘X-ray’ view.

Progressive volume indicators

Growth of computing capacities of personal computers made it possible for everyone to conduct a professional volume analysis with the help of specialized platforms. ATAS is such a platform.

Check what it can do:

Progressive volume indicators

It is a FDAX futures price chart with a 1 hour period. The chart type is cluster or footprint (ATAS has 25 variants of the footprint). The footprint variant in the chart shows coloured clusters instead of traditional candles: green clusters are buys and red clusters are sells. A wider cluster shows more trades. Convenient, isn’t it?

  1. It is a traditional trading volume indicator per unit of time.
  2. It is Cluster Stat, which gives the complete statistics by volumes. For example, Delta is a difference between buys and sells. The data are visualized with colours, but if we change the scale we would be able to see numeric values.
  3. Market Profile (or horizontal volumes) for one week (it is possible to select any period of time) with a breakdown into buys and sells.
  4. Arbitrary profile. ATAS immediately builds horizontal volumes for any part of the chart, which you select by the mouse.
  5. It is Big Trades indicator. It marks major buys (green) and sells (red). Set Big Trades Alert and you will not miss a major volume trade. Besides, the right arrow points to major volumes of buys when the resistance, which you can see in the arbitrary profile in point 4, is broken.
  6. Imbalance indicator. It shows disbalances between buys and sells in clusters.
  7. ATAS Smart Tape allows to analyze all (or filtered out) trades in the course of their execution on the exchange.

Besides, ATAS has:

  • a possibility to build various types of charts, which are not based on time;
  • a module for analyzing Smart DOM;
  • unique indicators: Cluster Search and Speed of Tape.

We’ve just briefly outlined what progressive methods of the volume analysis could do. Do you realize that we’ve just had an insight into a new universe, which differs from the one drawn by classical indicators? The volume analysis brings us closer to trading on the basis of real market mechanics.

How should we use volumes in practice? We often publish examples of the volume analysis in our blog and we will show you one example in this article but a bit later.

And now one more argument in favour of using volumes.

Volume analysis and the Law of Demand and Supply

Look at the picture below. It is a graphical interpretation of the Law of Demand and Supply. Perhaps, you saw such a chart when you were a senior student at a high school or junior student at a higher economic school.

The Law of Demand and Supply

It seems like a very simple picture for beginner theoretical economists.

  • Blue line is the Demand curve.
  • Red line is the Supply curve.
  • Intersection of the curves is the Equilibrium point or fair price.
  • Price is the price axis.
  • Quantity is the axis of a number of bought/sold commodities/services.

However, this simple picture is meaningful. Dependencies of Demand (a wish and readiness to buy) and Supply (a wish and readiness to sell) are a cornerstone and sacred truth, which is the foundation of any commercial trading, including trading on the exchange.

A reader of the article called Volume Analysis may ask: “What has the volume indicator to do with it?” Just look at the Quantity axis. In fact, it shows the value of trading ACTIVITY, which is transmitted through the volume indicator.

While the picture above is a two-dimensional projection of the demand and supply interaction, the typical chart of an exchange trader is a three-dimensional projection, since the Time axis is added to Price and Quantity.

The exchange chart with the volume indicator

Thus, the exchange trading chart shows changes in the:

  1. price
  2. and trading volume
  3. in time.

And now we have a fertile ground for analysis of the demand and supply dynamics based on the interaction of the values of price and volume in time.

The idea of the trading volume analysis

The idea of the trading volume analysis is reduced to the search for the most probable answers to the following questions:

  • Why did the price move up (down) and the volume increased (decreased)?
  • How much did the volume increased (decreased) when the price went up (down)?
  • Why does the volume increase and the price doesn’t move?
  • How did the delta (the difference between buys and sells) change?
  • How did the price behave when an abnormal volume emerged?
  • What happened after an abnormal volume emerged?
  • and so on.

Thus, analyzing the volume and its interrelations with the price, a trader forms his own opinion about the change of the demand and supply balance. Figuratively speaking, he ‘reads’ the dynamics of confrontation between buyers and sellers from the chart in real time.

Consequently, well founded trading ideas are developed.

For example:

  • The price grows slowly on falling volumes to the resistance level. The strength of buys is exhausted. It is a deficit of demand. A signal for selling since the current price is, most probably, higher than the fair one.
  • The price falls slowly on falling volumes to the support level. The pressure of sells ‘dries out’. It is a deficit of supply. A signal for buying since the current price is, most probably, lower than the fair one.
  • The price refuses to grow despite a big volume of buys. It means that a major player sells out the asset using sell limit orders. It is  a signal for selling.

Here we touch the subject of the market rationality. Followers of this theory believe that the current price is always fair and the market automatically takes into account all factors of influence on the price.

However…

The Wall Street business is financing corporations and selling securities. The public has a comparatively weak understanding of their real value.

Richard Wyckoff

The market prices are formed in the minds of human beings and Errare humanum est (everyone makes mistakes). You will be able to understand that the price is far from being fair in the pivot extreme points if you study price and volume charts, especially the moments of buying and selling climax patterns.

Splashes of volumes on the exchange are often accompanied with the media activity

Abnormal splashes of volumes on the exchange are often accompanied with media activity. The current price, most probably, moves far away from the fair one at such moments. The picture above shows:

  1. The buying climax in the bitcoin market in December 2017 when the price quote reached USD 20 thousand per one coin.
  2. The recent buying climax at the end of June 2019 when they asked USD 13 thousand per one coin.

You can find more examples of situations when the current market price may differ from the real asset value in ‘Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds’ by Charles Mackay (by the way, the favourite book of the greatest speculator Jesse Livermore. Read this article if you are looking for more books on trading: Trading books you must read).

Advantages of the volume analysis

Note that a trader who analyzes the volume doesn’t have to consider fundamental factors, track expert forecasts and process other additional sources. All the necessary information is already in the chart: time, price and volume.

This is the advantage of the volume analysis – the chart is a sufficient source for making conclusions regarding the forces of demand and supply and it provides all the necessary information in the form convenient for analysis. And it matters not what the motives are behind the actions of buyers and sellers – intersection of moving averages, deficit of demand in the overbought area, Trump’s tweet or ‘unexpected’ Flash Crash.

If a chart reader correctly interprets interaction of price and volume in time, he acquires the ability to act in harmony with strong players who rarely make mistakes. Major insiders already performed a correct fundamental analysis and their actions in the market (you can track them in the chart by volume splashes) lift the veil on their true intentions. The price and volume chart allows to do it. Especially in the event it is the footprint in the ATAS platform. Let’s consider an example.

Example

We already mentioned above the buying climax at the end of June 2019. Let’s analyze trading volumes at that period. Below is the footprint (what footprint is) from the BitMEX exchange with a 1D period.

Volume analysis in the cryptocurrency market
  1. The buying climax day. Surely it was accompanied with an avalanche of positive news in mainstream media. Note the buyers activity (massive green clusters) when the level of 12,500 was broken. If those green clusters were a true demand strength, why did then the bitcoin roll down so low in the next few days?
  2. July 10. Test of the level of 12,500. Note the clusters. There are ‘greenish’ buyers in a trap (these are traces of the stop loss activation). The main candle body are red clusters, which mean the sellers pressure.

Having compared facts in the price and volume chart, an analyst can make a conclusion that the market is not interested to move higher. It means that we should expect downward movement.

He can find a good entry point using the Smart DOM or Smart Tape data. This is how the trading on facts is carried out.

Summary

You need to find the point of support for trading on a long-term distance. The law of demand and supply, which lies in the foundation of price formation and reflects constant behaviour of people (ACTIVITY) in various market situations, could be (maybe even should be) such a reliable support:

  • if the price moves too low, the majority of buyers would wish to buy, but only few sellers would agree to sell;
  • if the price goes too high, the majority of buyers would not wish to buy, but the majority of sellers would gladly agree to sell;
  • abnormal activity (extremely high volume) is a sign of panic sells or euphoric buys (the Fear Of Missing Out effect).

Analysis (reading) of the chart of the price and volume in time is an interpretation of the market mood or analysis of the changing balances of demand and supply in the sensitive financial markets.

The chart never lies. Tom Williams

If there are no volumes in the chart, it is impossible to analyze demand and supply. The price chart without volumes is like a bicycle with one wheel. Yes, you can ride it as you can ski in the Sahara. But what do you need this experience for?

Download the free 14-day test version of the ATAS platform – a maximally flexible and powerful environment for the volume analysis. We want to remind you that you can use ATAS free of charge even after the test period but with minor restrictions.

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