Use
Commonly used in Japanese trading rooms,
Ichimoku is often applied to establish
the trend for a pair and detect trend
breakouts. It is decent during range
bound markets and like most indicators
performance often improves when used over
longer time frames.
History
The Ichimoku Cloud was originally called
the 'Ichimoku Kinko Hyo.' Where Ichimoku
means 'one glance,'Kinko 'balance' and
Hyo 'chart.' Thus the full translation
could best be described as 'one glance
balanced chart.' Originally developed by
Goichi Hosada pre WWII, a newspaper
journalist (published in 1969) who wanted
to develop an Uber-indicator that could
provide the trader with various levels of
support/resistance, entry/exit points,
direction of the trend, and strength of
the signal.
Kumo, the Ichimoku
Cloud
It later became known as the 'Ichimoku
Cloud' since the most characteristic
feature of the indicator is the cloud
(Kumo), which is designed to represent
various levels of support and resistance.
In developing the cloud, Hosada realized
support/resistance levels were not single
lines drawn in the sand, since traders
were often placing their trades at
various distances from the support
levels. Thus, since support was many
layers deep from the offers/bids around
the level, he created a cloud to
represent the past levels of
support/resistance. The cloud is composed
of the two Senkou Span lines (A&B or
1&2) which are pushed forward in
time, and when the area between them is
shaded in, it makes a cloud-like shape.
The most basic theory of this indicator
is that if the price is above the cloud,
the overall trend is bullish while below
the cloud is bearish, and in the cloud is
non-biased or unclear. Lastly, when the
price is above the cloud, then the top of
the cloud will act as a general support
level, and when price is below, the cloud
base will act as resistance. But remember
the cloud has thickness, and thus
resistance does as well, which by making
these thicker reduces the risk of a false
breakout.
Tenkan & Kijun
Lines
The indicator goes much further than
this, with using two moving average
lines; the Tenkan Line and the Kijun
Line, which are 9 and 26 day moving
averages (exponential). The Tenkan Line
is really the conversion line which is
when crosses the Kijun line from
underneath, is indicative of a bullish
signal. When it crosses over the Kijun
line from above pointing downward, it
becomes indicative of a bearish signal.
Chikou Span
There is also one last line called the
Chikou Span, which is representative of
today's price moved back 26 periods ago.
This is where the strength of the signal
comes in. If you have a bearish signal
(downward crossover of the Tenkan over
the Kijun) and the Chikou Span is below
the base, then the signal strength
increases. If you have a bullish
crossover (Tenkan crosses the Kijun from
underneath) and the Chikou Span is above
the cloud top, then the signal strength
increases.
There is one last metric for the strength
of the signal and confirmation for your
buy/sell signal. If the crossover of the
two lines (Tenkan & Kijun) occurs
above the cloud, then the bullish signal
strength increases and is further
confirmation. If the crossover occurs
below the cloud, then the bearish signal
intensifies and is further confirmation.
Medium buy/sell signals occur when the
crossover takes place in the cloud, and
weak occurs when the bullish crossover is
below the cloud, while a weak bearish
signal occurs above the cloud.