A market chart has two axes, the x-axis and they-axis. Where the x-axis registers the date, the y-axis registers the price. The y-axis has two methods for plotting it: an arithmetic scale or logarithmic scale. Whichever you chose will have implications for your trading.
Arithmetic scale: On an arithmetic scaled chart, the spacing between price levels is equal. If price rises, like from 1000.20 to 1500.20 and 1780.20 to 1980.20 for gold, the grid spacing on the chart does not change. This is a gold chart illustrating arithmetic scaled chart.
Logarithmic scale: The log chart is scaled based on percent moves. A hundred percent move or change in prices will have a larger space than a fifty percent move or change in prices because the spacing reflects differences in percentages. The same gold chart illustrating a logarithmic scale.
The differences in both scales are not readily noticeable when charts are plotted on short periods of time because price fluctuations are relatively subdued. However, you begin to notice considerable differences with large price fluctuations.
Because my trading is in the short term, I use the arithmetic scale. But position traders who deal on the longer term would consider using both arithmetic and logarithmic charts for their trading. That way they see both the price level moves as well as how that scales in percentage terms.
Arithmetic scale: On an arithmetic scaled chart, the spacing between price levels is equal. If price rises, like from 1000.20 to 1500.20 and 1780.20 to 1980.20 for gold, the grid spacing on the chart does not change. This is a gold chart illustrating arithmetic scaled chart.
Logarithmic scale: The log chart is scaled based on percent moves. A hundred percent move or change in prices will have a larger space than a fifty percent move or change in prices because the spacing reflects differences in percentages. The same gold chart illustrating a logarithmic scale.
The differences in both scales are not readily noticeable when charts are plotted on short periods of time because price fluctuations are relatively subdued. However, you begin to notice considerable differences with large price fluctuations.
Because my trading is in the short term, I use the arithmetic scale. But position traders who deal on the longer term would consider using both arithmetic and logarithmic charts for their trading. That way they see both the price level moves as well as how that scales in percentage terms.
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免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。