Measuring Trend and Trendiness
Measuring Trend and Trendiness
Measuring Trend and Trendiness
Note that the ES is drawn in pink; the Trendiness Measure is dark blue. Observe also that
trendiness tops out ahead of the futures at the left side of the chart, and then it bottoms
out ahead of the futures toward the right. This is precisely the pattern I had observed
with the Power Measure: shifts in trendiness precede shifts in trend.
Where the new measure may excel is in capturing breakout moves. My backtesting
suggests that low volume shifts from positive to negative trendiness (and from negative
to positive) generally signal a directionless market. When volume and volatility expand
during the directional shift, however, the market is generally signaling a breakout move.
Such moves, where markets are moving in a direction and the directional persistence is
expanding, represent the most profitable market opportunities.
Conversely, because the Trendiness Measure is created with a zero average value, it is
possible to look at the standard deviation of Trendiness readings and establish a neutral
zone, in which there is no significant trend. This, combined with a measure of volatility,
could help traders identify markets where opportunity is limited.
In the chart below, I have plotted the ES futures against the Trendiness Measure for the
past two days of trading. Notice how the market shifted during that time from a growing
positive trend to a waning positive one to a neutral mode. This signaled weakening
upside opportunity as the trading day wore on.
I will post the Trendiness Measure daily on the Weblog, so that we can follow its
indications in real time. If it only helps keep traders from fading significant directional
moves, it will have been worth the development effort.