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DEALING WITH THE SCALE EFFECT

This is another highly significant factor when dealing with charts.

The kernel of the problem is that no chart is unique.

The time-price pairs that constitute the data on which the chart is based
are unique.

Once established, they appear in your Wall Street Journal just exactly as
they appear in “Friend Jack’s Journal,” 2000 miles away.

However, when you construct a chart of this data and Jack charts the
same data you will sometimes have difficulty believing that the 2 charts
describe the same stock.

In fact the significance of time-price relationships in a stock can be


suppressed and /or lost if care is not use in the selection of scale factors!

Now, the time scale factor that you choose is simply the space that you
allot on you chart to represent a particular unit of time (day ,week, etc.).

Similarly, the price scale factor is the spaced you allot on your chart to
represent a specific unit of price (one-eighth, on-point, etc.).

Thus by choice of scale factor, a chart can minimize time effects while
emphasizing price motion, or vice versa.

If you fix your time scale factor, you can accomplish the same results by
varying the price scale factor..

Or you may select both so that you must stand yards away in order to
see relationships without receiving a surrealistic effect.

Through compression of both scales, you can convey a sense of


unimportance and insignificance for both time and price motions – hence
of the stock itself!

The problem is thus seen as one in which you must first know what it is
you’re looking for on a chart.

Then you must choose scale factors which optimize the ease of
perceptivity of the desired information.
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You will to want to experiment on you own in this area, but a few
guidelines can be drawn:

4. In general, arrange the scale factors sot that the price motion over the
time period of interest forms a nearly square chart.

5. To suppress the effect of short components while emphasizing the


longer ones, plot the price motion in less space while retaining the same
scale factor for time.

6. To suppress the effect of long components while emphasizing the short


ones, plot the price motion in more space while retaining the same scale
factor for time

7. If a pattern you’re analyzing (a triangle, for example) seems


insignificant to you, enlarge both price and time scale factors.

8. If you attention seems riveted on what you know are insignificant


phenomena, reduce both price and time scale factors.

Chart services present a different version of the same problem. In such


charts, the space available is fixed, as is the time span covered.

This means that the time scale factor never varies from chart to chart
and issue to issue.

At the same time, the price motion of all stocks charted by the service
must be displayed in a fixed amount of chart space fro the total time
covered.

Thus a highly volatile issue will have a compressed priced scale (with all
that this implies), and a sluggish issue will have an expanded price scale
(with undue emphasis on short duration fluctuations). …

All of this means that the same types of… phenomena occurring in 2
different stocks charted in this manner require a shift in your thinking in
order to effect the required same interpretation.

Either this, or one of the other of the 2 charts must be replotted.

… practice negating the effect of scale factor change from chart to chart…

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From The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing J.M. Hurst pg 165

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