Gann Intraday Calculator
Gann Intraday Calculator
Gann Intraday Calculator
Hi All,
In the next few pages, I will be explaining you how to use Gann Calculator and how to do
intraday trading based on this calculator.
I browsed through many forums for Gann Calculator and found many articles wrote on it. As a
normal trader and reader, I was not able to understand any of them.
After browsing through more than 25 websites (where no one is sharing their way of trading with
this method, they just give GANN formula/square/angles/etc/etc), I found the simple way to
trade using Gann Square of 9.
If you then look at the numbers running down to the bottom right
hand corner on the Square of Nine you would find the midpoint
between the squares of odd and even numbers. Using the numbers
16 and 25 as an example of our odd and even numbers you will
find the number 21 representing their midpoint.
Cardinal Cross and Ordinal Cross
The numbers that fall on the blue lines form what’s known as the
“Cardinal Cross”
and the numbers that fall on the red lines running into the
corners of the square, form what’s known as the “Ordinal Cross”.
The red and blue lines intersect with other and divide the
square in 8 equal parts.
The Gann Wheel, what most people probably think of as the Square
of Nine, is sometimes called a "Square Root Calculator" or a
device that "Squares the Circle." This simple illustration may
explain how and why these terms came about. You probably
recognize that the illustration is just the first few rings of a
Gann Wheel with the numeral "1" at the center.
Here's where it gets fun. The square root of 15 is 3.87. Add two
to the square root of 15 and we get 5.87. Square 5.87 and we get
34.49 which rounds to 34. Now we know that adding two to the
square root of a number and squaring that sum is the same thing
as a 360 degree rotation up on the Gann Wheel. If "2" represents
a 360 degree rotation then "1" represents a 180 degree rotation,
"0.5" a 90 degree rotation, and so on. W.D. Gann tells us that
90 degrees in very important in the stock market. What Gann is
really saying is that adding and subtracting .5 (and exact
multiples or proportions of .5) to the square root of a stock
price and then squaring the result is very important! We
acknowledge that there is is another school of Gann thought that
will say that Gann's reference to 90 degrees relates to the
movement of celestial bodies. We've looked into that and they
may be right, but for our purposes we've also learned that these
schools of thought can peacefully exist alongside each other
without contradiction.
So lets begin....
Ideally you should take the Weighted Average Price of any stock or scrip between 9:05 am -
9:15 am. (This timing is for Indian markets. If you are dealing in some other market the time
range should be initial 15 minutes.)
However, after 9:30 am, you should only take LTP of stock or index.
The basic idea behind this is that during initial few minutes of market opening, there is lot of
volatility, so to decide fair price we should take Weighted Average.
Many times it is not possible for many traders to start trading from 9:00 am. In that case, those
who start trading after 9:30 am(half hour after market opens), can take LTP.
During 9:05-9:15 am, the WAP (Weighted Average Price) of HDFC in NSE was 2607
After entering this value in Gann Calculator, we get the Gann square similar to below one.
.
As per this we should buy above 2613 and short below 2601.
If you look, the price didn’t fall below 2601 after 9:15 am.
Now we take 2620 as our reference price. and put it in Gann Calculator.
We get the below recommendations
Recommendation:
Buy at / above: 2626.56 Targets: 2638.07 - 2650.92 - 2663.8 - 2676.72
After 1-2 hrs, HDFC started moving up and it confirmed its uptrend by crossing the price 2627.
Our target 2638 just got touched and again price started falling indicating selling pressure at
2638.
And if look at the intraday graph of HDFC we see the HDFC was seeing resistance at 2625 and
then at 2638. (see the image below)