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Understanding ABCDs

ABCD patterns are essentially structured price patterns with useful projection capabilities. They existed long before neoclassical technical analysis although we have added our own twist to them to make them more useful. They come in two flavors:

These are the same except that one is projecting price higher (bullish) while the other (bearish) is projecting price lower.

What are they? They are structured price patterns that look like lightening bolts. In TA Today we use them for price projection, i.e. the expected target of a directional move.

Here's an example of a bearish ABCD.

Bearish ABCD

A is the starting price point, B the first leg down, C the retrace leg up and D, the projection target lower. A bullish ABCD would be the same structure just with a projection that is higher.

The figure in the lower half of the above chart is the ABCD table and is viewable on TA Today by either pressing the ABCD button when view a chart or, if configured, automatically as a pop-up window.

An explanation for each column's values in the ABCD table are: