Academy Reading Charts Chart Basics
2

What is a Price Chart

Reading Charts Beginner ⏱ 4 min read
Reading Charts
Momentum Indicators Relative Strength Index
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Reading Charts
22 topics · 5 chapters
Master chart reading — the language of the market.
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Why Traders Use Charts

Imagine trying to understand how a company is performing by reading thousands of individual transaction records one by one. Impossible.

A price chart converts all that raw data into a visual picture — allowing you to instantly see patterns, trends and opportunities that would be invisible in numbers alone.

Professional traders don’t predict the future — they read the past to make educated decisions about probability.

What is a Price Chart?

A price chart is a visual representation of price movement over time.

It has two axes:

X axis — horizontal
Represents time. Moving left to right — older data on left, newer data on right.

Y axis — vertical
Represents price. Higher on the chart = higher price.

Every point on the chart shows the price of an asset at a specific moment in time.

What Does a Chart Actually Show?

A price chart shows the battle between buyers and sellers over time.

When buyers are stronger — price moves up on the chart.
When sellers are stronger — price moves down on the chart.
When they are equal — price moves sideways.

This battle never stops. Every second of every day — buyers and sellers are competing. The chart is simply a record of who has been winning.

Timeframes

A timeframe determines how much time each data point on the chart represents.

Short timeframes:

  • 1 minute — each point shows 1 minute of price action
  • 5 minutes
  • 15 minutes
  • 1 hour

Medium timeframes:

  • 4 hours
  • 1 day — each point shows one full day of trading

Long timeframes:

  • 1 week
  • 1 month

Which timeframe to use?

The shorter the timeframe — the more noise and false signals.
The longer the timeframe — the clearer and more reliable the trend.

  • Scalpers use 1 minute to 15 minute charts
  • Day traders use 1 hour to 4 hour charts
  • Swing traders use daily charts
  • Position traders use weekly charts

Reading Direction

Uptrend — series of higher prices over time
Price making higher highs and higher lows.
Buyers in control.

Downtrend — series of lower prices over time
Price making lower highs and lower lows.
Sellers in control.

Sideways — price moving in a range
Neither buyers nor sellers dominating.
Often precedes a big move in either direction.

Why Charts Work

Charts work because human psychology is consistent.

Fear, greed, hope and panic cause traders to behave in predictable patterns — patterns that repeat across all markets and all timeframes.

When you learn to read charts — you are learning to read human psychology at scale.

Bitcoin chart patterns from 2013 look identical to patterns from 2024. Human nature does not change.

In the next topic we will explore the three main types of charts and which one professional traders prefer.

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