What is a Daily Chart

A daily chart is a graph that displays the movements of a given security through candlestick formations. A daily chart may focus on the price action of a security for a single day or it can also comprehensively show the daily price movements of a security over a specified time frame.

BREAKING DOWN Daily Chart

Daily charts are the main tool used by technical analysts seeking to profit from intraday price movements as well as longer-term trends. The candlestick formation is a primary component of a daily chart showing the opening and closing price as well as the trading range. Candlestick formations will vary based on the time period used in creating a daily chart. Technical charts can be graphed by days, months or years. Many technical analysts may use an intraday chart in combination with a longer-term chart for trading analysis.

Intraday Charts

Intraday charts graph the movement of a security’s price from the market open to the close. Analysts can specify the candlestick display time frames they wish to view in this type of chart through their trading system’s settings. The candlestick bars will form on the chart in real time based on the designated settings. Common settings are five or ten minutes per candlestick.

Multiple Trading Sessions

Charts with multiple trading sessions will display a series of daily candlestick formations, showing the price movements for a specified period of time. Technical analysis trading research has shown that technical trading is often more successful when following the tides and waves of a security’s price trend rather than intraday ripples. Thus, candlestick charts showing multiple trading sessions are often more commonly used.

In the above example, each candlestick represents a single day or trading session for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY). Note that there are about five months worth of trading data contained in the chart, which differentiates it from an intraday chart.

The line between days may be blurred in some markets. For example, the foreign exchange (forex) market operates 24 hours per day, which means that there is technically no stoppage of trading between one trading day and the next. The convention in these cases is to consider a single day to be 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time to 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time the next day. Most websites and applications that provide daily charts are automatically displayed this way.

Multiple Uses of Daily Charts

Many day traders incorporate daily charts in their trading setups that span multiple time frames. For instance, day traders may have two monitors displaying trades by the hour and trades over the past several days. This can help a trader to get a more complete picture of a security’s trading action.

Day traders use daily charts as their primary source of information. Typically trading systems will overlay candlestick formations with technical patterns and alerts. Traders can customize their price charts to include channels as well as a variety of signal alerts to help them identify profitable trading opportunities.