Projecting Price Targets with Point & Figure Charts from Breakouts

Talking Points:

  • Why Use Price Targets

  • Price Targets on 1-Box vs. 3-Box P&F Charts

  • What Targets Should You Ignore?

“Wishful thinking must be banished.”

I did precisely the wrong thing. The cotton showed me a loss and I kept it. The wheat showed me a profit and I sold it out. Of all the speculative blunders there are few greater than trying to average a losing game. Always sell what shows you a loss and keep what shows you a profit.

-Jesse Livermore

One of the first mistakes that traders fall prey to based on their own faulty thinking is exiting good trades too soon. If this was the only problem, traders wouldn’t be so bad off but the other thing we’ve found is that traders also hold on to losing traders longing their winners hoping they eventually come back. The bad trades all too often don’t come back and traders are forced out of their bad trades at bad prices instead of deciding when to get out of them

(If you’re curious to know what we found to be the common characteristics of the best traders over 1 year of live trading data, check out our free guide here.)

Why Use Price Targets?

PF-Charts-Part-3_body_Picture_1.png, Projecting Price Targets with Point & Figure Charts from Breakouts
PF-Charts-Part-3_body_Picture_1.png, Projecting Price Targets with Point & Figure Charts from Breakouts

If you identified with the problem mentioned in the opening paragraph of holding on to losers too long, do not lose hope. There are a few reasons why traders can do much harm to their account equity by holding onto traders too long:

  1. Trader’s don’t know exactly what they’re trying to get out of the market

  2. Trader’s don’t want to admit that their analysis was wrong

  3. Trader’s don’t have firm points of ruin where they see the trade as no longer worth it

To help you attack the first reason why traders hold on to loosing trades, it may be helpful for you to learn how to do P & F price projections. While note a panacea, Point & Figure ‘counts’, can help you to hold on to a profitable trade to either squeeze more out of your good entry or at least bring your stop to break even so that you are at least limiting your risk. Last week, you learned that the two most common types of P&F charts are 1-box & 3-box charts and today you will learn how to create price targets on both charts from both horizontal and vertical price action.

Price Targets on 1-Box vs. 3-Box P&F Charts

Ideally, Point & Figure charts should be added to your current analysis routine while not replacing your trading charts and also allow you to see from a glance how strong a trend is or how stubborn a price range is. Also, 1-Box & 3-Box P&F charts should be utilized in tandem as they complement each other more so than compete against each other. The first price target we will look at are horizontal counts from a congestion breakout on the more active, 1-box charts: